126654-1995-Romualdez-Marcos v. Commission On Elections
126654-1995-Romualdez-Marcos v. Commission On Elections
126654-1995-Romualdez-Marcos v. Commission On Elections
SYLLABUS
7. ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; CASE AT BAR. It stands to reason therefore, that petitioner
merely committed an honest mistake in jotting down the word "seven" in the
space provided for the residency qualication requirement. The circumstances
leading to her ling the questioned entry obviously resulted in the subsequent
confusion which prompted petitioner to write down the period of her actual stay
in Tolosa, Leyte instead of her period of residence in the First district, which was
"since childhood" in the space provided. These circumstances and events are
amply detailed in the COMELEC's Second Division's questioned resolution, albeit
with a dierent interpretation. For instance, when herein petitioner announced
that she would be registering in Tacloban City to make her eligible to run in the
First District, private respondent Montejo opposed the same, claiming that
petitioner was a resident of Tolosa, not Tacloban City. Petitioner then registered in
her place of actual residence in the First District, which was Tolosa, Leyte, a fact
which she subsequently noted down in her Certicate of Candidacy. A close look
at said certicate would reveal the possible source of the confusion: the entry for
residence (Item No. 7) is followed immediately by the entry for residence in the
constituency where a candidate seeks election. Having been forced by private
respondent to register in her place of actual residence in Leyte instead of
petitioner's claimed domicile, it appears that petitioner had jotted down her
period of stay in her legal residence or domicile. The juxtaposition of entries in
Item 7 and Item 8 the rst requiring actual residence and the second requiring
domicile coupled with the circumstances surrounding petitioner's registration
as a voter in Tolosa obviously led to her writing down an unintended entry for
which she could be disqualied. This honest mistake should not, however, be
allowed to negate the fact of residence in the First District if such fact were
established by means more convincing than a mere entry on a piece of paper. cdll
13. ID.; ID.; TERM RESIDENCE REFERS TO "ACTUAL RESIDENCE." The term
residence may mean one thing in civil law (or under the Civil Code) and quite
another thing in political law. What stands clear is that insofar as the Civil Code
is concerned aecting the rights and obligations of husband and wife the
term residence should only be interpreted to mean "actual residence." The
inescapable conclusion derived from this unambiguous civil law delineation
therefore, is that when petitioner married the former President in 1954, she kept
her domicile of origin and merely gained a new home, not a domicilium
necessarium.
14. STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION; STATUTE REQUIRING RENDITION OF
JUDGMENT WITHIN SPECIFIED TIME, MERELY DIRECTORY. It is a settled
doctrine that a statute requiring rendition of judgment within a specied time is
generally construed to be merely directory, "so that non-compliance with them
does not invalidate the judgment on the theory that if the statute had intended
such result it would have clearly indicated it." The dierence between a
mandatory and a directory provision is often made on grounds of necessity.
15. CONSTITUTIONAL LAW; COMELEC; JURISDICTION TO DECIDE PENDING
DISQUALIFICATION CASE NOT LOST BY HOLDING OF ELECTIONS. With the
enactment of Sections 6 and 7 of R.A. 6646 in relation to Section 78 of B.P. 881,
it is evident that the respondent Commission does not lose jurisdiction to hear
and decide a pending disqualication case under Section 78 of B.P. 881 even after
the elections.
16. ID.; LEGISLATURE; HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ELECTORAL TRIBUNAL
(HRET); SOLE JUDGE OF ALL CONTESTS RELATING TO ELECTIONS, RETURNS
AND QUALIFICATIONS OF MEMBERS OF CONGRESS; CANDIDATE MUST HAVE
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BEEN PROCLAIMED. As to the House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal's
supposed assumption of jurisdiction over the issue of petitioner's qualications
after the May 8, 1995 elections, suce it to say that HRET's jurisdiction as the
sole judge of all contests relating to the elections, returns and qualications of
members of Congress begins only after a candidate has become a member of the
House of Representatives. Petitioner not being a member of the House of
Representatives, it is obvious that the HRET at this point has no jurisdiction over
the question.
PUNO, J ., concurring opinion:
1. CIVIL LAW; DOMICILE; DOMICILE OF ORIGIN AND DOMICILE OF CHOICE;
ESTABLISHED BY CANDIDATE'S CONTINUED STAY IN HER PARENT'S RESIDENCE.
There is no question that petitioner's original domicile is in Tacloban, Leyte.
Her parents were domiciled in Tacloban. Their ancestral house is in Tacloban.
They have vast real estate in the place. Petitioner went to school, and thereafter
worked there. Justice Puno considers Tacloban as her initial domicile, both her
domicile of origin and her domicile of choice. Her domicile of origin as it was the
domicile of her parents when she was a minor; and her domicile of choice, as she
continued living there even after reaching the age of majority.
2. ID.; ID.; DOMICILE BY OPERATION OF LAW; ACQUIRED BY MARRIAGE AND
DELIBERATE CHOICE OF A DIFFERENT DOMICILE BY THE HUSBAND. There is
also no question that in May, 1954, petitioner married the late President
Ferdinand E. Marcos. By contracting marriage, her domicile became subject to
change by law, and the right to change it was given by Article 110 of the Civil
Code. The dicult issues start as we determine whether petitioner's marriage to
former President Marcos ipso facto resulted in the loss of her Tacloban domicile.
Justice Puno respectfully submits that her marriage by itself alone did not cause
her to lose her Tacloban domicile. Article 110 of the Civil Code merely gave the
husband the right to x the domicile of the family. In the exercise of the right,
the husband may explicitly choose the prior domicile of his wife, in which case,
the wife's domicile remains unchanged. The husband can also implicitly
acquiesce to his wife's prior domicile even if it is dierent. It is not, therefore, the
mere fact of marriage but the deliberate choice of a dierent domicile by the
husband that will change the domicile of a wife from what it was prior to their
marriage. The domiciliary decision made by the husband in the exercise of the
right conferred by Article 110 of the Civil Code binds the wife. Any and all acts of
a wife during her coverture contrary to the domiciliary choice of the husband
cannot change in any way the domicile legally xed by the husband. These acts
are void not only because the wife lacks the capacity to choose her domicile but
also because they are contrary to law and public policy. prLL
3. ID.; ID.; ID.; CASE AT BENCH. In the case at bench, it is not disputed that
former President Marcos exercised his right to x the family domicile and
established it in Batac, Ilocos Norte, where he was then the congressman. At that
particular point of time and throughout their married life, petitioner lost her
domicile in Tacloban, Leyte. Since petitioner's Batac domicile has been xed by
operation of law, it was not aected in 1959 when her husband was elected as
Senator, when they lived in San Juan, Rizal and where she registered as a voter.
It was not also aected in 1965 when her husband was elected President, when
they lived in Malacaang Palace, and when she registered as a voter in San
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Miguel, Manila. Nor was it aected when she served as a member of the
Batasang Pambansa, Minister of Human Settlements and Governor of Metro
Manila during the incumbency of her husband as President of the nation. Under
Article 110 of the Civil Code, it was only her husband who could change the
family domicile in Batac and the evidence shows he did not eect any such
change. To a large degree, this follows the common law that "a woman on her
marriage loses her own domicile and by operation of law, acquires that of her
husband, no matter where the wife actually lives or what she believes or
intends."
4. ID.; ID.; ID.; PRINCIPLE THAT AFTER THE HUSBAND'S DEATH, WIFE RETAINS
LAST DOMICILE OF HER HUSBAND, SHOULD NOW BE ABANDONED. The more
dicult task is how to interpret the eect of the death on September 28, 1989
of former President Marcos on petitioner's Batac domicile. The issue is of rst
impression in our jurisdiction and two (2) schools of thought contend for
acceptance. One is espoused by our distinguished colleague, Mr. Justice Davide,
Jr., heavily relying on American authorities. He echoes the theory that after the
husband's death, the wife retains the last domicile of her husband until she
makes an actual change. The American case law that the wife still retains her
dead husband's domicile is based on ancient common law which we can no
longer apply in the Philippine setting today. The presumption that the wife
retains the domicile of her deceased husband is an extension of this common law
concept. The concept and its extension have provided some of the most
iniquitous jurisprudence against women. The rulings relied upon by Mr. Justice
Davide in CJS and AM JUR 2d are American state court decisions handed down
between the years 1917 and 1938, or before the time when women were
accorded equality of rights with men. Undeniably, the women's liberation
movement resulted in far-ranging state legislations in the United States to
eliminate gender inequality. However, it has been declared that under modern
statutes changing the status of married women and departing from the common
law theory of marriage, there is no reason why a wife may not acquire a
separate domicile for every purpose known to the law. In publishing in 1969 the
Restatement of the Law, Second (Conict of Laws 2d), the reputable American
Law Institute also categorically stated that the view of Blackstone ". . . is no
longer held.As the result of statutes and court decisions, a wife now possesses
practically the same rights and powers as her unmarried sister." In light of the
Family Code which abrogated the inequality between husband and wife as
started and perpetuated by the common law, there is no reason in espousing the
anomalous rule that the wife still retains the domicile of her dead husband.
Article 110 of the Civil Code which provides the statutory support for this stance
has been repealed by Article 69 of the Family Code. By its repeal, it becomes a
dead-letter law, and we are not free to resurrect it by giving it further eect in
any way or manner such as by ruling that the petitioner is still bound by the
domiciliary determination of her dead husband.
5. ID.; ID.; ID.; WIFE REACQUIRED DOMICILE OF ORIGIN UPON DEATH OF
HUSBAND. Prescinding from these premises, Justice Puno respectfully submits
that the better stance is to rule that petitioner reacquired her Tacloban domicile
upon the death of her husband in 1989. This is the necessary consequence of the
view that petitioner's Batac dictated domicile did not continue after her
husband's death; otherwise, she would have no domicile and that will violate the
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universal rule that no person can be without a domicile at any point of time. This
stance also restores the right of petitioner to choose her domicile before it was
taken away by Article 110 of the Civil Code, a right now recognized by the Family
Code and protected by the Constitution. Likewise, Justice Puno cannot see the
fairness of the common law requiring petitioner to choose again her Tacloban
domicile before she could be released from her Batac domicile. She lost her
Tacloban domicile not through her act but through the act of her deceased
husband when he xed their domicile in Batac. Her husband is dead and he
cannot rule her beyond the grave. The law disabling her to choose her own
domicile has been repealed. Considering all these, common law should not put
the burden on petitioner to prove she has abandoned her dead husband's
domicile. There is neither rhyme nor reason for this gender-based burden. Llibris
6. ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; DELIBERATE CHOICE BY WIFE MANIFEST IN CASE AT BAR.
But even assuming arguendo that there is need for convincing proof that
petitioner chose to reacquire her Tacloban domicile, still, the records reveal
ample evidence to this eect. In her adavit submitted to the respondent
COMELEC, petitioner averred among others that: "I was not permitted, however,
to live and stay in the Sto. Nio Shrine residence in Tacloban City where I wanted
to stay and reside, after repairs and renovations were completed. In August
1994, I transferred from San Jose, Tacloban City, to my residence in Barangay
Olot, Tolosa, Leyte, when PCGG permitted me to stay and live there." It is then
clear that in 1992 petitioner reestablished her domicile in the First District of
Leyte. It is not disputed that in 1992, she rst lived at the house of her brother in
San Jose, Tacloban City and later, in August 1994, she transferred her residence
in Barangay Olot, Tolosa, Leyte. Both Tacloban City and the municipality of Olot
are within the First District of Leyte. Since petitioner reestablished her old
domicile in 1992 in the First District of Leyte, she more than complied with the
constitutional requirement of residence ". . . for a period of not less than one year
immediately preceding the day of the election," i.e., the May 8, 1995 elections.
DECISION
KAPUNAN, J : p
On March 23, 1995, private respondent Cirilo Roy Montejo, the incumbent
Representative of the First District of Leyte and a candidate for the same position,
led a "Petition for Cancellation and Disqualication" 5 with the Commission on
Elections alleging that petitioner did not meet the constitutional requirement for
residency. In his petition, private respondent contended that Mrs. Marcos lacked
the Constitution's one year residency requirement for candidates to the House of
representatives on the evidence of declarations made by her in Voter
Registration Record 94-No. 3349772 6 and in her Certicate of Candidacy. He
prayed that "an order be issued declaring (petitioner) disqualied and canceling
the certicate of candidacy." 7
On March 29, 1995, petitioner led an Amended/Corrected Certicate of
Candidacy, changing the entry "seven" months to "since childhood" in item no. 8
of the amended certicate. 8 On the same day, the Provincial Election Supervisor
of Leyte informed petitioner that:
[T]his oce cannot receive or accept the aforementioned Certicate of
Candidacy on the ground that it is led out of time, the deadline for the
ling of the same having already lapsed on March 20, 1995. The
Corrected/Amended Certicate of Candidacy should have been led on or
before the March 20, 1995 deadline. 9
"Respondent raised the armative defense in her Answer that the printed
word "Seven" (months) was a result of an "honest misinterpretation or
honest mistake" on her part and, therefore, an amendment should
subsequently be allowed. She averred that she thought that what was
asked was her "actual and physical" presence in Tolosa and not residence
of origin or domicile in the First Legislative District, to which she could
have responded "since childhood." In an accompanying adavit, she
stated that her domicile is Tacloban City, a component of the First District,
to which she always intended to return whenever absent and which she
has never abandoned. Furthermore, in her memorandum, she tried to
discredit petitioner's theory of disqualication by alleging that she has
been a resident of the First Legislative District of Leyte since childhood,
although she only became a resident of the Municipality of Tolosa for
seven months. She asserts that she has always been a resident of
Tacloban City, a component of the First District, before coming to the
Municipality of Tolosa.
Along this point, it is interesting to note that prior to her registration in
Tolosa, respondent announced that she would be registering in Tacloban
City so that she can be a candidate for the District. However, this
intention was rebued when petitioner wrote the Election Ocer of
Tacloban not to allow respondent since she is a resident of Tolosa and not
Tacloban. She never disputed this claim and instead implicitly acceded to it
by registering in Tolosa.
This incident belies respondent's claim of 'honest misinterpretation or
honest mistake.' Besides, the Certicate of Candidacy only asks for
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RESIDENCE. Since on the basis of her Answer, she was quite aware of
'residence of origin' which she interprets to be Tacloban City, it is curious
why she did not cite Tacloban City in her Certicate of Candidacy. Her
explanation that she thought what was asked was her actual and physical
presence in Tolosa is not easy to believe because there is none in the
question that insinuates about Tolosa. In fact, item no. 8 in the Certicate
of Candidacy speaks clearly of 'Residency in the CONSTITUENCY where I
seek to be elected immediately preceding the election.' Thus, the
explanation of respondent fails to be persuasive. prLL
I. Petitioner's qualication
A perusal of the Resolution of the COMELEC's Second Division reveals a
startling confusion in the application of settled concepts of "Domicile" and
"Residence" in election law. While the COMELEC seems to be in agreement
with the general proposition that for the purposes of election law, residence is
synonymous with domicile, the Resolution reveals a tendency to substitute or
mistake the concept of domicile for actual residence, a conception not intended
for the purpose of determining a candidate's qualications for election to the
House of Representatives as required by the 1987 Constitution. As it were,
residence, for the purpose of meeting the qualication for an elective position,
has a settled meaning in our jurisdiction.
Article 50 of the Civil Code decrees that "[f]or the exercise of civil rights and the
fulllment of civil obligations, the domicile of natural persons is their place of
habitual residence." In Ong vs. Republic 20 this court took the concept of
domicile to mean an individual's "permanent home", "a place to which,
whenever absent for business or for pleasure, one intends to return, and depends
on facts and circumstances in the sense that they disclose intent." 21 Based on
the foregoing, domicile includes the twin elements of "the fact of residing or
physical presence in a xed place" and animus manendi, or the intention of
returning there permanently.
Residence, in its ordinary conception, implies the factual relationship of an
individual to a certain place. It is the physical presence of a person in a given
area, community or country. The essential distinction between residence and
domicile in law is that residence involves the intent to leave when the purpose
for which the resident has taken up his abode ends. One may seek a place for
purposes such as pleasure, business, or health. If a person's intent be to remain,
it becomes his domicile; if his intent is to leave as soon as his purpose is
established it is residence. 22 It is thus, quite perfectly normal for an individual to
have dierent residences in various places. However, a person can only have a
single domicile, unless, for various reasons, he successfully abandons his domicile
in favor of another domicile of choice. In Uytengsu vs. Republic, 23 we laid this
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distinction quite clearly:
"There is a dierence between domicile and residence. 'Residence' is used
to indicate a place of abode, whether permanent or temporary; 'domicile'
denotes a xed permanent residence to which, when absent, one has the
intention of returning. A man may have a residence in one place and a
domicile in another. Residence is not domicile, but domicile is residence
coupled with the intention to remain for an unlimited time. A man can
have but one domicile for the same purpose at any time, but he may
have numerous places of residence. His place of residence is generally his
place of domicile, but it is not by any means necessarily so since no
length of residence without intention of remaining will constitute domicile."
For political purposes the concepts of residence and domicile are dictated
by the peculiar criteria of political laws. As these concepts have evolved in our
election law, what has clearly and unequivocally emerged is the fact that
residence for election purposes is used synonymously with domicile.
I n Nuval vs. Guray, 24 the Court held that "the term residence . . . is
synonymous with domicile which imports not only intention to reside in a
xed place, but also personal presence in that place, coupled with conduct
indicative of such intention." 25 Larena vs. Teves 26 reiterated the same
doctrine in a case involving the qualications of the respondent therein to the
post of Municipal President of Dumaguete, Negros Oriental. Faypon vs.
Quirino, 27 held that the absence from residence to pursue studies or practice
a profession or registration as a voter other than in the place where one is
elected does not constitute loss of residence. 28 So settled is the concept (of
domicile) in our election law that in these and other election law cases, this
Court has stated that the mere absence of an individual from his permanent
residence without the intention to abandon it does not result in a loss or
change of domicile.
The deliberations of the 1987 Constitution on the residence qualication
for certain elective positions have placed beyond doubt the principle that when
the Constitution speaks of "residence" in election law, it actually means only
"domicile" to wit:
Mr. Nolledo: With respect to Section 5, I remember that in the 1971
Constitutional Convention, there was an attempt to require residence in
the place not less than one year immediately preceding the day of the
elections. So my question is: What is the Committee's concept of
residence of a candidate for the legislature? Is it actual residence or is it
the concept of domicile or constructive residence?
Mr. Davide: Madame President, insofar as the regular members of the
National Assembly are concerned, the proposed section merely provides,
among others, 'and a resident thereof,' that is, in the district for a period
of not less than one year preceding the day of the election. This was in
eect lifted from the 1973 Constitution, the interpretation given to it was
domicile. 29
xxx xxx xxx
Mrs. Rosario Braid: The next question is on Section 7, page 2. I think
Commissioner Nolledo has raised the same point that "resident" has been
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interpreted at times as a matter of intention rather than actual residence.
Mr. De los Reyes: Domicile
Ms. Rosario Braid: Yes, So, would the gentleman consider at the proper
time to go back to actual residence rather than mere intention to reside?
Mr. De los Reyes: But we might encounter some diculty especially
considering that a provision in the Constitution in the Article on Surage
says that Filipinos living abroad may vote as enacted by law. So, we have
to stick to the original concept that it should be by domicile and not
physical residence. 30
[I]n February 1986 (she claimed that) she and her family were abducted
and kidnapped to Honolulu, Hawaii. In November 1991, she came home
to Manila. In 1992, respondent ran for election as President of the
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Philippines and led her Certicate of Candidacy wherein she indicated
that she is a resident and registered voter of San Juan, Metro Manila.
The duty to live together can only be fullled if the husband and wife
are physically together. This takes into account the situations where the
couple has many residences (as in the case of petitioner). If the husband has
to stay in or transfer to any one of their residences, the wife should
necessarily be with him in order that they may "live together." Hence, it is
illogical to conclude that Art. 110 refers to "domicile" and not to "residence."
Otherwise, we shall be faced with a situation where the wife is left in the
domicile while the husband, for professional or other reasons, stays in one of
their (various) residences. As Dr. Tolentino further explains:
Residence and Domicile. Whether the word "residence" as used with
reference to particular matters is synonymous with "domicile" is a
question of some diculty, and the ultimate decision must be made from
a consideration of the purpose and intent with which the word is used.
Sometimes they are used synonymously, at other times they are
distinguished from one another.
Separate Opinions
PUNO, J ., concurring:
It was Aristotle who taught mankind that things that are alike should be
treated alike, while things that are unalike should be treated unalike in
proportion to their unalikeness. 1 Like other candidates, petitioner has clearly
met the residence requirement provided by Section 6, Article VI of the
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Constitution. 2 We cannot disqualify her and treat her unalike, for the
Constitution guarantees equal protection of the law. I proceed from the
following factual and legal propositions:
First. There is no question that petitioner's original domicile is in
Tacloban, Leyte. Her parents were domiciled in Tacloban. Their ancestral house
is in Tacloban. They have vast real estate in the place. Petitioner went to
school and thereafter worked there. I consider Tacloban as her initial domicile,
both her domicile of origin and her domicile of choice. Her domicile of origin as
it was the domicile of her parents when she was a minor; and her domicile of
choice, as she continued living there even after reaching the age of majority.
Second. There is also no question that in May, 1954, petitioner married
the late President Ferdinand E. Marcos. By contracting marriage, her domicile
became subject to change by law, and the right to change it was given by
Article 110 of the Civil Code to her husband. Article 110 of the Civil Code
provides:
"ARTICLE 110. The husband shall x the residence of the family . But the
court may exempt the wife from living with the husband if he should live
abroad unless in the service of the Republic." 3 (Emphasis supplied)
It is not, therefore, the mere fact of marriage but the deliberate choice of a
dierent domicile by the husband that will change the domicile of a wife from
what it was prior to their marriage. The domiciliary decision made by the
husband in the exercise of the right conferred by Article 110 of the Civil Code
binds the wife. Any and all acts of a wife during her coverture contrary to the
domiciliary choice of the husband cannot change in any way the domicile
legally xed by the husband. These acts are void not only because the wife
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lacks the capacity to choose her domicile but also because they are contrary to
law and public policy.
In the case at bench, it is not disputed that former President Marcos exercised his
right to x the family domicile and established it in Batac, Ilocos Norte, where he
was then the congressman. At that particular point of time and throughout their
married life, petitioner lost her domicile in Tacloban, Leyte. Since petitioner's
Batac domicile has been xed by operation of law, it was not aected in 1959
when her husband was elected as Senator, when they lived in San Juan, Rizal
and where she registered as a voter. It was not also aected in 1965 when her
husband was elected President, when they lived in Malacaang Palace, and when
she registered as a voter in San Miguel, Manila. Nor was it aected when she
served as a member of the Batasang Pambansa, Minister of Human Settlements
and Governor of Metro Manila during the incumbency of her husband as
President of the nation. Under Article 110 of the Civil Code, it was only her
husband who could change the family domicile in Batac and the evidence shows
he did not eect any such change. To a large degree, this follows the common
law that "a woman on her marriage loses her own domicile and by operation of
law, acquires that of her husband, no matter where the wife actually lives or
what she believes or intends." 7
Fourth. The more dicult task is how to interpret the eect of the death
on September 28, 1989 of former President Marcos on petitioner's Batac
domicile. The issue is of rst impression in our jurisdiction and two (2) schools
of thought contend for acceptance. One is espoused by our distinguished
colleague, Mr. Justice Davide, Jr., heavily relying on American authorities. 8 He
echoes the theory that after the husband's death, the wife retains the last
domicile of her husband until she makes an actual change.
I do not subscribe to this submission. The American case law that the
wife still retains her dead husband's domicile is based on ancient common law
which we can no longer apply in the Philippine setting today. The common law
identied the domicile of a wife as that of the husband and denied to her the
power of acquiring a domicile of her own separate and apart from him. 9 Legal
scholars agree that two (2) reasons support this common law doctrine. The
rst reason as pinpointed by the legendary Blackstone is derived from the
view that "the very being or legal existence of the woman is suspended during
the marriage, or at least is incorporated and consolidated into that of the
husband." 10 The second reason lies in "the desirability of having the
interests of each member of the family unit governed by the same law." 11
The presumption that the wife retains the domicile of her deceased husband is
an extension of this common law concept. The concept and its extension have
provided some of the most iniquitous jurisprudence against women. It was
under common law that the 1873 American case of Bradwell v . Illinois 12 was
decided where women were denied the right to practice law. It was
unblushingly ruled that "the natural and proper timidity and delicacy which
belongs to the female sex evidently unts it for many of the occupations of
civil life. . . . This is the law of the Creator." Indeed, the rulings relied upon by
Mr. Justice Davide in CJS 13 and AM JUR 2d 14 are American state court
decisions handed down between the years 1917 15 and 1938, 16 or before the
time when women were accorded equality of rights with men. Undeniably, the
womens' liberation movement resulted in far-ranging state legislations in the
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United States to eliminate gender inequality. 17 Starting in the decade of the
seventies, the courts likewise liberalized their rulings as they started
invalidating laws infected with gender-bias. It was in 1971 when the US
Supreme Court in Reed v. Reed, 18 stuck a big blow for women equality when
it declared as unconstitutional an Idaho law that required probate courts to
choose male family members over females as estate administrators. It held
that mere administrative inconvenience cannot justify a sex-based distinction.
These signicant changes both in law and in case law on the status of women
virtually obliterated the iniquitous common law surrendering the rights of
married women to their husbands based on the dubious theory of the parties'
theoretic oneness. The Corpus Juris Secundum editors did not miss the
relevance of this revolution on women's right as they observed: "However, it
has been declared that under modern statutes changing the status of married
women and departing from the common law theory of marriage, there is no
reason why a wife may not acquire a separate domicile for every purpose
known to the law. " 19 In publishing in 1969 the Restatement of the Law ,
Second (Conict of Laws 2d), the reputable American Law Institute also
categorically stated that the view of Blackstone ". . . is no longer held. As the
result of statutes and court decisions, a wife now possesses practically the
same rights and powers as her unmarried sister." 20
In the case at bench, we have to decide whether we should continue clinging to
t h e anachronistic common law that demeans women, especially married
women. I submit that the Court has no choice except to break away from this
common law rule, the root of the many degradations of Filipino women. Before
1988, our laws particularly the Civil Code, were full of gender discriminations
against women. Our esteemed colleague, Madam Justice Flerida Ruth Romero,
cited a few of them as follows: 21
"xxx xxx xxx
Taking the lead in Asia, our government exerted eorts, principally through
legislations, to eliminate inequality between men and women in our land. The
watershed came on August 3, 1988 when our Family Code took eect which,
among others, terminated the unequal treatment of husband and wife as to
their rights and responsibilities. 22
The Family Code attained this elusive objective by giving new rights to
married women and by abolishing sex-based privileges of husbands. Among
others, married women are now given the joint right to administer the family
property, whether in the absolute community system or in the system of
conjugal partnership; 23 joint parental authority over their minor children,
both over their persons as well as their properties; 24 joint responsibility for
the support of the family; 25 the right to jointly manage the household; 26
and, the right to object to their husband's exercise of profession, occupation,
business or activity. 27 Of particular relevance to the case at bench is Article
69 of the Family Code which took away the exclusive right of the husband to
x the family domicile and gave it jointly to the husband and the wife, thus:
"ARTICLE 69. The husband and wife shall x the family domicile. In case of
disagreement, the court shall decide.
The court may exempt one spouse from living with the other if the latter
should live abroad or there are other valid and compelling reasons for the
exemption. However, such exemption shall not apply if the same is not
compatible with the solidarity of the family." (Emphasis supplied)
Article 69 repealed Article 110 of the Civil Code. Commenting on the duty of
the husband and wife to live together, former Madam Justice Alice Sempio-Diy
of the Court of Appeals specied the instances when a wife may now refuse to
live with her husband, thus: 28
"(2) The wife has the duty to live with her husband, but she may refuse to
do so in certain cases like:
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(a) If the place chosen by the husband as family residence
is dangerous to her life;
In light of the Family Code which abrogated the inequality between husband
and wife as started and perpetuated by the common law, there is no reason in
espousing the anomalous rule that the wife still retains the domicile of her
dead husband. Article 110 of the Civil Code which provides the statutory
support for this stance has been repealed by Article 69 of the Family Code. By
its repeal, it becomes a dead-letter law, and we are not free to resurrect it by
giving it further eect in any way or manner such as by ruling that the
petitioner is still bound by the domiciliary determination of her dead husband.
Aside from reckoning with the Family Code, we have to consider our
Constitution and its rm guarantees of due process and equal protection of
law. 30 It can hardly be doubted that the common law imposition on a married
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woman of her dead husband's domicile even beyond his grave is patently
discriminatory to women. It is a gender-based discrimination and is not
rationally related to the objective of promoting family solidarity. It cannot
survive a constitutional challenge. Indeed, compared with our previous
fundamental laws, the 1987 Constitution is more concerned with equality
between sexes as it explicitly commands that the State ". . . shall ensure
fundamental equality before the law of women and men." To be exact, Section
14, Article II provides: "The State recognizes the role of women in nation
building, and shall ensure fundamental equality before the law of women and
men." We shall be transgressing the sense and essence of this constitutional
mandate if we insist on giving our women the caveman's treatment. LLjur
Prescinding from these premises, I respectfully submit that the better stance is to
rule that petitioner reacquired her Tacloban domicile upon the death of her
husband in 1989. This is the necessary consequence of the view that petitioner's
Batac dictated domicile did not continue after her husband's death; otherwise,
she would have no domicile and that will violate the universal rule that no
person can be without a domicile at any point of time. This stance also restores
the right of petitioner to choose her domicile before it was taken away by Article
110 of the Civil Code, a right now recognized by the Family Code and protected
by the Constitution. Likewise, I cannot see the fairness of the common law
requiring petitioner to choose again her Tacloban domicile before she could be
released from her Batac domicile. She lost her Tacloban domicile not through her
act but through the act of her deceased husband when he xed their domicile in
Batac. Her husband is dead and he cannot rule her beyond the grave. The law
disabling her to choose her own domicile has been repealed. Considering all
these, common law should not put the burden on petitioner to prove she has
abandoned her dead husband's domicile. There is neither rhyme nor reason for
this gender-based burden.
But even assuming arguendo that there is need for convincing proof
that petitioner chose to reacquire her Tacloban domicile, still, the records
reveal ample evidence to this eect. In her adavit submitted to the
respondent COMELEC, petitioner averred:
"xxx xxx xxx
"36. In November, 1991, I came home to our beloved country, after
several requests for my return were denied by President Corazon C.
Aquino, and after I led suits for our Government to issue me my
passport.
37. But I came home without the mortal remains of my beloved husband,
President Ferdinand E. Marcos, which the Government unreasonably
considered a threat to the national security and welfare.
38. Upon my return to the country, I wanted to immediately live and
reside in Tacloban City or in Olot, Tolosa, Leyte, even if my residences
there were not livable as they had been destroyed and cannibalized. The
PCGG, however, did not permit and allow me.
39. As a consequence, I had to live at various times in the Westin
Philippine Plaza in Pasay City, a friend's apartment on Ayala Avenue, a
house in South Forbes Park which my daughter rented, and Pacic Plaza,
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all in Makati.
40. After the 1992 Presidential Elections, I lived and resided in the
residence of my brother in San Jose, Tacloban City, and pursued my
negotiations with PCGG to recover my sequestered residences in
Tacloban City and Barangay Olot, Tolosa, Leyte.
It is then clear that in 1992 petitioner reestablished her domicile in the First
District of Leyte. It is not disputed that in 1992, she rst lived at the house of
her brother in San Jose, Tacloban City and later, in August 1994, she
transferred her residence in Barangay Olot, Tolosa, Leyte. Both Tacloban City
and the municipality of Olot are within the First District of Leyte. Since
petitioner reestablished her old domicile in 1992 in the First District of Leyte,
she more than complied with the constitutional requirement of residence ". . .
for a period of not less than one year immediately preceding the day of the
election," i.e., the May 8, 1995 elections. LLcd
These allegations which private respondent did not challenge were not lost to the
perceptive eye of Commissioner Maambong who in his Dissenting Opinion, 37
held:
"xxx xxx xxx
"Prior to the registration date January 28, 1995 the petitioner (herein
private respondent Montejo) wrote the Election Ocer of Tacloban City
not to allow respondent (petitioner herein) to register thereat since she is
a resident of Tolosa and not Tacloban City. The purpose of this move of
the petitioner (Montejo) is not lost to (sic) the Commission. In UND No.
95-001 (In the matter of the Legislative Districts of the Provinces of
Leyte, Iloilo, and South Cotabato, Out of Which the New Provinces of
Biliran, Guimaras and Saranggani Were Respectively Created), . . . Hon.
Cirilo Roy G. Montejo, Representative, First District of Leyte, wanted the
Municipality of Tolosa, in the First District of Leyte, transferred to the
Second District of Leyte. The Hon. Sergio A.F. Apostol, Representative of
the Second District of Leyte, opposed the move of the petitioner
(Montejo). Under Comelec Resolution No. 2736 (December 29, 1994), the
Commission on Elections refused to make the proposed transfer.
Petitioner (Montejo) led 'Motion for Reconsideration of Resolution No.
2736' which the Commission denied in a Resolution promulgated on
February 1, 1995. Petitioner (Montejo) led a petition for certiorari before
the Honorable Supreme Court (Cirilo Roy G.Montejo vs. Commission on
Elections, G.R. No. 118702) questioning the resolution of the
Commission. Believing that he could get a favorable ruling from the
Supreme Court, petitioner (Montejo) tried to make sure that the
respondent (petitioner herein) will register as a voter in Tolosa so that she
will be forced to run as Representative not in the First but in the Second
District.
"It did not happen. On March 16, 1995, the Honorable Supreme Court
unanimously promulgated a 'Decision,' penned by Associate Justice
Reynato S. Puno, the dispositive portion of which reads:
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'IN VIEW WHEREOF, Section 1 of Resolution No. 2736
insofar as it transferred the municipality of Capoocan of the
Second District and the municipality of Palompon of the
Fourth District to the Third District of the province of Leyte,
is annulled and set aside. We also deny the Petition praying
for the transfer of the municipality of Tolosa from the First
District to the Second District of the province of Leyte. No
costs.'
"Petitioner's (Montejo's) plan did not work. But the respondent (petitioner
herein) was constrained to register in the Municipality of Tolosa where her
house is instead of Tacloban City, her domicile. In any case, both Tacloban
City and Tolosa are in the same First Legislative District."
All these attempts to misuse our laws and legal processes are forms of rank
harassments and invidious discriminations against petitioner to deny her
equal access to a public oce. We cannot commit any hermeneutic violence
to the Constitution by torturing the meaning of equality, the end result of
which will allow the harassment and discrimination of petitioner who has
lived a controversial life, a past of alternating light and shadow. There is but
one Constitution for all Filipinos. Petitioner cannot be adjudged by a
"dierent" Constitution, and the worst way to interpret the Constitution is to
inject in its interpretation, bile and bitterness.
Sixth. In Gallego v. Vera, 38 we explained that the reason for this
residence requirement is "to exclude a stranger or newcomer, unacquainted
with the conditions and needs of a community and not identied with the
latter, from an elective oce to serve that community. . . ." Petitioner's
lifetime contacts with the First District of Leyte cannot be contested. Nobody
can claim that she is not acquainted with its problems because she is a
stranger to the place. None can argue she cannot satisfy the intent of the
Constitution.
Seventh. In resolving election cases, a dominant consideration is the
need to eectuate the will of the electorate. The election results show that
petitioner received Seventy Thousand Four Hundred Seventy-One (70,471)
votes, while private respondent got only Thirty-Six Thousand Eight Hundred
Thirty-Three (36,833) votes. Petitioner is clearly the overwhelming choice of
the electorate of the First District of Leyte and this is not a sleight of statistics.
We cannot frustrate this sovereign will on highly arguable technical
considerations. In case of doubt, we should lean towards a rule that will give
life to the people's political judgment.
A nal point. The case at bench provides the Court with the rare
opportunity to rectify the inequality of status between women and men by
rejecting the iniquitous common law precedents on the domicile of married
women and by redening domicile in accord with our own culture, law, and
Constitution. To rule that a married woman is eternally tethered to the
domicile dictated by her dead husband is to preserve the anachronistic and
anomalous balance of advantage of a husband over his wife. We should not
allow the dead to govern the living even if the glories of yesteryears seduce
us to shout long live the dead! The Family Code buried this gender-based
discrimination against married women and we should not excavate what has
been entombed. More importantly, the Constitution forbids it.
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I vote to grant the petition.
FRANCISCO, J ., concurring:
I concur with Mr. Justice Kapunan's ponencia nding petitioner qualied for the
position of Representative of the First Congressional District of Leyte. I wish,
however, to express a few comments on the issue of petitioner's domicile.
Domicile has been dened as that place in which a person's habitation is xed,
without any present intention of removing therefrom, and that place is properly
the domicile of a person in which he has voluntarily xed his abode, or
habitation, not for a mere special or temporary purpose, but with a present
intention of making it his permanent home (28 C.J.S. 1). It denotes a xed
permanent residence to which when absent for business, or pleasure, or for like
reasons one intends to return, and depends on facts and circumstances, in the
sense that they disclose intent. (Ong Huan Tin v. Republic, 19 SCRA 966, 969)
Domicile is classied into domicile of origin and domicile of choice. The
law attributes to every individual a domicile of origin, which is the domicile of
his parents, or of the head of his family, or of the person on whom he is
legally dependent at the time of his birth. While the domicile of origin is
generally the place where one is born or reared, it maybe elsewhere (28 C.J.S.
5). Domicile of choice, on the other hand, is the place which the person has
elected and chosen for himself to displace his previous domicile; it has for its
true basis or foundation the intention of the person (28 C.J.S. 6). In order to
hold that a person has abandoned his domicile and acquired a new one called
domicile of choice, the following requisites must concur, namely, (a) residence
or bodily presence in the new locality, (b) intention to remain there or animus
manendi, and (c) an intention to abandon the old domicile or animus non
revertendi (Romualdez v. RTC , Br. 7, Tacloban City, 226 SCRA 408, 415). A
third classication is domicile by operation of law which attributes to a person
a domicile independent of his own intention or actual residence, ordinarily
resulting from legal domestic relations, as that of the wife arising from
marriage, or the relation of a parent and a child (28 C.J.S. 7).
In election law, when our Constitution speaks of residence for election
purposes it means domicile (Co v. Electoral Tribunal of the House of
Representatives, 199 SCRA 692, 713; Nuval v. Guray, 52 Phil. 645, 651). To
my mind, public respondent Commission on Elections misapplied this concept
of domicile which led to petitioner's disqualication by ruling that petitioner
failed to comply with the constitutionally mandated one-year residence
requirement. Apparently, public respondent Commission deemed as conclusive
petitioner's stay and registration as voter in many places as conduct disclosing
her intent to abandon her established domicile of origin in Tacloban, Leyte. In
several decisions, though, the Court has laid down the rule that registration of
a voter in a place other than his place of origin is not sucient to constitute
abandonment or loss of such residence (Faypon v. Quirino, 96 Phil. 294, 300).
Respondent Commission oered no cogent reason to depart from this rule
except to surmise petitioner's intent of abandoning her domicile of origin.
It has been suggested that petitioner's domicile of origin was supplanted
by a new domicile due to her marriage, a domicile by operation of law. The
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proposition is that upon the death of her husband in 1989 she retains her
husband's domicile, i.e., Batac, Ilocos Norte, until she makes an actual change
thereof. I nd this proposition quite untenable.
Tacloban, Leyte, is petitioner's domicile of origin which was involuntarily
supplanted with another, i.e., Batac, Ilocos Norte, upon her marriage in 1954
with then Congressman Marcos. By legal ction she followed the domicile of
her husband. In my view, the reason for the law is for the spouses to fully and
eectively perform their marital duties and obligations to one another. 1 The
question of domicile, however, is not aected by the fact that it was the legal
or moral duty of the individual to reside in a given place (28 C.J.S. 11). Thus,
while the wife retains her marital domicile so long as the marriage subsists,
she automatically loses it upon the latter's termination, for the reason behind
the law then ceases. Otherwise, petitioner, after her marriage was ended by
the death of her husband, would be placed in a quite absurd and unfair
situation of having been freed from all wifely obligations yet made to hold on
to one which no longer serves any meaningful purpose. CDta
PADILLA, J ., dissenting:
I regret that I cannot join the majority opinion as expressed in the well-
written ponencia of Mr. Justice Kapunan.
As in any controversy arising out of a Constitutional provision, the inquiry must
begin and end with the provision itself. The controversy should not be blurred by
what, to me, are academic disquisitions. In this particular controversy, the
Constitutional provision on point states that "no person shall be a member of
the House of Representatives unless he is a natural-born citizen of the
Philippines, and on the day of the election, is at least twenty-ve (25) years of
age, able to read and write, and except the party list representatives, a registered
voter in the district in which he shall be elected, and a resident thereof for a
period of not less than one year immediately preceding the day of the election."
(Article VI, Section 6)
It has been argued that for purposes of our election laws, the term residence has
been understood as synonymous with domicile. This argument has been
validated by no less than the Court in numerous cases 1 where signicantly the
factual circumstances clearly and convincingly proved that a person does not
eectively lose his domicile of origin if the intention to reside therein is manifest
with his personal presence in the place, coupled with conduct indicative of such
intention.
With this basic thesis in mind, it would not be dicult to conceive of dierent
modalities within which the phrase "a resident thereof (meaning, the legislative
district) for a period of not less than one year" would t.
The rst instance is where a person's residence and domicile coincide in which
case a person only has to prove that he has been domiciled in a permanent
location for not less than a year before the election.
A second situation is where a person maintains a residence apart from
his domicile in which case he would have the luxury of district shopping,
provided of course, he satises the one-year residence period in the district as
the minimum period for eligibility to the position of congressional
representative for the district.
In either case, one would not be constitutionally disqualied for
abandoning his residence in order to return to his domicile of origin, or better
still, domicile of choice; neither would one be disqualied for abandoning
altogether his domicile in favor of his residence in the district where he
desires to be a candidate.
(Signature of Candidate)" 2
Petitioner's aforestated certicate of candidacy led on 8 March 1995
contains the decisive component or seed of her disqualication. It is contained
in her answer under oath of "seven months" to the query of "residence in the
constituency wherein I seek to be elected immediately preceding the
election."
It follows from all the above that the Comelec committed no grave
abuse of discretion in holding that petitioner is disqualied from the position
of representative for the 1st congressional district of Leyte in the elections of
8 May 1995, for failure to meet the "not less than one-year residence in the
constituency (1st district, Leyte) immediately preceding the day of election (8
May 1995)."
Having arrived at petitioner's disqualication to be a representative of
the rst district of Leyte, the next important issue to resolve is whether or not
the Comelec can order the Board of Canvassers to determine and proclaim the
winner out of the remaining qualied candidates for representative in said
district.
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I am not unaware of the pronouncement made by this Court in the case
of Labo vs. Comelec, G.R. 86564, August 1, 1989, 176 SCRA 1 which gave the
rationale as laid down in the early 1912 case of Topacio vs. Paredes,23 Phil.
238 that:
". . . Sound policy dictates that public elective oces are lled by those
who have received the highest number of votes cast in the election for
that oce, and it is a fundamental idea in all republican forms of
government that no one can be declared elected and no measure can be
declared carried unless he or it receives a majority or plurality of the legal
votes cast in the election. (20 Corpus Juris 2nd, S 243, p. 676)
The fact that the candidate who obtained the highest number of votes is
later declared to be disqualied or not eligible for the oce to which he
was elected does not necessarily entitle the candidate who obtained the
second highest number of votes to be declared the winner of the elective
oce. The votes cast for a dead, disqualied, or non-eligible person may
not be valid to vote the winner into oce or maintain him there. However,
in the absence of a statute which clearly asserts a contrary political and
legislative policy on the matter, if the votes were cast in the sincere belief
that the candidate was alive, qualied, or eligible, they should not be
treated as stray, void or meaningless."
Under Sec. 6 RA 6646, (An Act Introducing Additional Reforms in the Electoral
System and for other purposes) (84 O.G. 905, 22 February 1988) it is provided
that:
". . . Any candidate who has been declared by nal judgment to be
disqualied shall not be voted for, and the votes cast for him shall not be
counted. If for any reason a candidate is not declared by nal judgment
before an election to be disqualied and he is voted for and receives the
winning number of votes in such election, the Court or Commission shall
continue with the trial and hearing of the action, inquiry or protest and,
upon motion of the complainant or any intervenor, may, during the
pendency thereof order the suspension of the proclamation of such
candidate whenever the evidence of his guilt is strong."
Since the present case is an after election scenario, the power to suspend
proclamation (when evidence of his guilt is strong) is also explicit under the law.
What happens then when after the elections are over, one is declared
disqualied? Then, votes cast for him "shall not be counted" and in legal
contemplation, he no longer received the highest number of votes.
It stands to reason that Section 6 of RA 6646 does not make the second
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placer the winner simply because a "winning candidate is disqualied," but
that the law considers him as the candidate who had obtained the highest
number of votes as a result of the votes cast for the disqualied candidate not
being counted or considered,
As this law clearly reects the legislative policy on the matter, then
there is no reason why this Court should not re-examine and consequently
abandon the doctrine in the Jun Labo case. It has been stated that "the
qualications prescribed for elective oce cannot be erased by the electorate
alone. The will of the people as expressed through the ballot cannot cure the
vice of ineligibility" most especially when it is mandated by no less than the
Constitution.
REGALADO, J ., dissenting:
While I agree with some of the factual bases of the majority opinion, I cannot
arrive conjointly at the same conclusion drawn therefrom. Hence, this dissent
which assuredly is not formulated "on the basis of the personality of a petitioner
in a case."
I go along with the majority in their narration of antecedent facts, insofar as the
same are pertinent to this case, and which I have simplied as follows:
1. Petitioner, although born in Manila, resided during her childhood in the
present Tacloban City, she being a legitimate daughter of parents who
appear to have taken up permanent residence therein. She also went to
school there and, for a time, taught in one of the schools in that city.
2. When she married then Rep. Ferdinand E. Marcos who was then
domiciled in Batac, Ilocos Norte, by operation of law she acquired a new
domicile in that place in 1954.
3. In the successive years and during the events that happened
thereafter, her husband having been elected as a Senator and then as
President, she lived with him and their family in San Juan, Rizal and then in
Malacaang Palace in San Miguel, Manila.
4. Over those years, she registered as a voter and actually voted in
Batac, Ilocos Norte, then in San Juan, Rizal, and also in San Miguel, Manila,
all these merely in the exercise of the right of surage.
5. It does not appear that her husband, even after he had assumed those
lofty positions successively, ever abandoned his domicile of origin in
Batac, Ilocos Norte where he maintained his residence and invariably
voted in all elections.
6. After the ouster of her husband from the presidency in 1986 and the
sojourn of the Marcos family in Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S.A., she eventually
returned to the Philippines in 1991 and resided in dierent places which
she claimed to have been merely temporary residences.
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7. In 1992, petitioner ran for election as President of the Philippines and in
her certicate of candidacy she indicated that she was then a registered
voter and resident of San Juan, Metro Manila.
8. On August 24, 1994, she led a letter for the cancellation of her
registration in the Permanent List of Voters in Precinct No. 157 of San
Juan, Metro Manila in order that she may "be re-registered or transferred
to Brgy. Olot, Tolosa, Leyte." On August 31, 1994, she followed this up
with her Sworn Application for Cancellation of Voter's Previous
Registration wherein she stated that she was a registered voter in
Precinct No. 157-A, Brgy. Maytunas, San Juan, Metro Manila and that she
intended to register in Brgy. Olot, Tolosa, Leyte.
9. On January 28, 1995, petitioner registered as a voter at Precinct No.
18-A of Olot, Tolosa, Leyte, for which purpose she led with the therein
Board of Election Inspectors a voter's registration record form alleging
that she had resided in that municipality for six months.
10. On March 8, 1995, petitioner led her certicate of candidacy for the
position of Representative of the First District of Leyte wherein she alleged
that she had been a resident for "Seven Months" of the constituency
where she sought to be elected.
11. On March 29, 1995, she led an "Amended/Corrected Certicate of
Candidacy" wherein her answer in the original certicate of candidacy to
item "8. RESIDENCE IN THE CONSTITUENCY WHERE I SEEK, TO BE
ELECTED IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING THE ELECTION:" was changed or
replaced with a new entry reading "SINCE CHILDHOOD."
The sole issue for resolution is whether, for purposes of her candidacy, petitioner
had complied with the residency requirement of one year as mandated by no
less than Section 6, Article VI of the 1987 Constitution.
I do not intend to impose upon the time of my colleagues with a dissertation on
the dierence between residence and domicile. We have had enough of that and
I understand that for purposes of political law and, for that matter of
international law, residence is understood to be synonymous with domicile. That
is so understood in our jurisprudence and in American Law, in contradistinction to
the concept of residence for purposes of civil, commercial and procedural laws
whenever an issue thereon is relevant or controlling.
Consequently, since in the present case the question of petitioner's residence is
integrated in and inseparable from her domicile, I am addressing the issue from
the standpoint of the concept of the latter term, specically its permutations into
the domicile of origin, domicile of choice and domicile by operation of law, as
understood in American law from which for this case we have taken our
jurisprudential bearings.
My readings inform me that the domicile of the parents at the time of
birth, or what is termed the "domicile of origin," constitutes the domicile of an
infant until abandoned, or until the acquisition of a new domicile in a dierent
place. 1 In the instant case, we may grant that petitioner's domicile of origin, 2
at least as of 1938, was what is now Tacloban City.
Now, as I have observed earlier, domicile is said to be of three kinds,
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that is, domicile by birth, domicile by choice, and domicile by operation of law.
The rst is the common case of the place of birth or domicilium originis; the
second is that which is voluntarily acquired by a party or domicilium proprio
motu; the last which is consequential, as that of a wife arising from marriage,
3 is sometimes called domicilium necesarium. There is no debate that the
domicile of origin can be lost or replaced by a domicile of choice or a domicile
by operation of law subsequently acquired by the party.
When petitioner contracted marriage in 1954 with then Rep. Marcos, by
operation of law, not only international or American but of our own
enactment, 4 she acquired her husband's domicile of origin in Batac, Ilocos
Norte and correspondingly lost her own domicile of origin in Tacloban City.
Her subsequent changes of residence to San Juan, Rizal, then to San
Miguel, Manila, thereafter to Honolulu, Hawaii, and back to now San Juan,
Metro Manila do not appear to have resulted in her thereby acquiring new
domiciles of choice. In fact, it appears that her having resided in those places
was by reason of the fortunes or misfortunes of her husband and his
peregrinations in the assumption of new ocial positions or the loss of them.
Her residence in Honolulu and, of course, those after her return to the
Philippines were, as she claimed, against her will or only for transient
purposes which could not have invested them with the status of domiciles of
choice. 5
After petitioner's return to the Philippines in 1991 and up to the present
imbroglio over her requisite residency in Tacloban City or Olot, Tolosa, Leyte,
there is no showing that she ever attempted to acquire any other domicile of
choice which could have resulted in the abandonment of her legal domicile in
Batac, Ilocos Norte. On that score, we note the majority's own submission 6
that, to successfully eect a change of domicile, one must demonstrate (a) an
actual removal or an actual change of domicile, (b) a bona de intention of
abandoning the former place of residence and establishing a new one, and (c)
acts which correspond with the purpose.
We consequently have to also note that these requirements for the
acquisition of a domicile of choice apply whether what is sought to be changed
or substituted is a domicile of origin (domicilium originis) or a domicile by
operation of law (domicilium necesarium). Since petitioner had lost her
domicilium originis which had been replaced by her domicilium necesarium, it
is therefore her continuing domicile in Batac, Ilocos Norte which, if at all, can
be the object of legal change under the contingencies of the case at bar.
To get out of this quandary, the majority decision echoes the dissenting
opinion of Commissioner Regalado E. Maambong in SPA 95-009 of the
Commission on Elections, 7 and advances this novel proposition:
"It may be said that petitioner lost her domicile of origin by operation of
law as a result of her marriage to the late President Ferdinand E. Marcos
in 1952 (sic, 1954). By operation of law (domicilium necesarium), her legal
domicile at the time of her marriage became Batac, Ilocos Norte although
there were no indications of an intention on her part to abandon her
domicile of origin. Because of her husband's subsequent death and
through the operation of the provisions of the New Family Code already
in force at the time, however, her legal domicile automatically reverted to
her domicile of origin. . . ." (Emphasis supplied).
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Firstly, I am puzzled why although it is conceded that petitioner had
acquired a domicilium necesarium in Batac, Ilocos Norte, the majority insists
on making a qualication that she did not intend to abandon her domicile of
origin. I nd this bewildering since, in this situation, it is the law that declares
where petitioner's domicile is at any given time, and not her self-serving or
putative intent to hold on to her former domicile. Otherwise, contrary to their
own admission that one cannot have more than one domicile at a time, 8 the
majority would be suggesting that petitioner retained Tacloban City as (for
lack of a term in law since it does not exist therein) the equivalent of what is
fancied as a reserved, dormant, potential, or residual domicile. prLL
Secondly, domicile once lost in accordance with law can only be recovered
likewise in accordance with law. However, we are here being titillated with the
possibility of an automatic reversion to or reacquisition of a domicile of origin
after the termination of the cause for its loss by operation of law. The majority
agrees that since petitioner lost her domicile of origin by her marriage, the
termination of the marriage also terminates that eect thereof. I am impressed
by the ingeniousness of this theory which proves that, indeed, necessity is the
mother of inventions. Regretfully, I nd some diculty in accepting either the
logic or the validity of this argument.
I agree with the majority's discourse on the virtues of the growing and expanded
participation of women in the aairs of the nation, with equal rights and
recognition by Constitution and statutory conferment. However, I have searched
in vain for a specic law or judicial pronouncement which either expressly or by
necessary implication supports the majority's desired theory of automatic
reacquisition of or reversion to the domicilium originis of petitioner. Denitely, as
between the settled and desirable legal norms that should govern this issue,
there is a world of dierence; and, unquestionably, this should be resolved by
legislative articulation but not by the eloquence of the well-turned phrase.
In sum, petitioner having lost Tacloban City as her domicile of origin since 1954
and not having automatically reacquired any domicile therein, she cannot legally
claim that her residency in the political constituency of which it is a part
continued since her birth up to the present. Respondent commission was,
therefore, correct in rejecting her pretension to that eect in her
amended/corrected certicate of candidacy, and in holding her to her admission
in the original certicate that she had actually resided in that constituency for
only seven months prior to the election. These considerations render it
unnecessary to further pass upon the procedural issues raised by petitioner.
ON THE FOREGOING PREMISES, I vote to DISMISS the petition for lack of merit.
cdlex
Under common law, a woman upon her marriage loses her own domicile and, by
operation of law, acquires that of her husband, no matter where the wife
actually lives or what she believes or intends. Her domicile is xed in the sense
that it is declared to be the same as his, and subject to certain limitations, he can
change her domicile by changing his own (25 Am Jur 2d Domicile 48, 37).
It must, however, be pointed out that under Article 69 of the Family Code, the
xing of the family domicile is no longer the sole prerogative of the husband, but
is now a joint decision of the spouses, and in case of disagreement the court shall
decide. The said article uses the term "family domicile," and not family residence,
as "the spouses may have multiple residences, and the wife may elect to remain
in one of such residences, which may destroy the duty of the spouses to live
together and its corresponding benets" (ALICIA V. SEMPIO-DIY, Handbook on the
Family Code of the Philippines, [1988], 102).
Petitioner has appealed to this Court for relief after the COMELEC ruled that she
was disqualied from running for Representative of her District and that, in the
event that she should, nevertheless, muster a majority vote, her proclamation
should be suspended. Not by a straightforward ruling did the COMELEC
pronounce its decision as has been its unvarying practice in the past, but by a
startling succession of "reverse somersaults." Indicative of its shifting stance vis-
a-vis petitioner's certicate of candidacy were rst, the action of its Second
Division disqualifying her and cancelling her original Certicate of Candidacy by a
vote of 2-1 on April 24, 1995; then the denial by the COMELEC en banc of her
Motion for Reconsideration on May 7, 1995, a day before the election; then
because she persisted in running, its decision on May 11, 1995 or three days
after the election, allowing her proclamation in the event that the results of the
canvass should show that she obtained the highest number of votes (obviously
noting that petitioner had won overwhelmingly over her opponent), but almost
simultaneously reversing itself by directing that even if she wins, her
proclamation should nonetheless be suspended.
Crucial to the resolution of the disqualication issue presented by the case at
bench is the interpretation to be given to the one-year residency requirement
imposed by the Constitution on aspirants for a Congressional seat. 1
Bearing in mind that the term "resident" has been held to be
synonymous with "domicile" for election purposes, it is important to
determine whether petitioner's domicile was in the First District of Leyte and
if so, whether she had resided there for at least a period of one year.
Undisputed is her domicile of origin, Tacloban, where her parents lived at the
time of her birth. Depending on what theory one adopts, the same may have
been changed when she married Ferdinand E. Marcos, then domiciled in Batac,
by operation of law. Assuming it did, his death certainly released her from the
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obligation to live with him at the residence xed by him during his lifetime.
What may confuse the layman at this point is the fact that the term
"domicile" may refer to "domicile of origin," "domicile of choice," or "domicile
by operation of law," which subject we shall not belabor since it has been
amply discussed by the ponente and in the other separate opinions.
In any case, what assumes relevance is the divergence of legal opinion
as to the eect of the husband's death on the domicile of the widow. Some
scholars opine that the widow's domicile remains unchanged; that the
deceased husband's wishes perforce still bind the wife he has left behind.
Given this interpretation, the widow cannot possibly go far enough to sever
the domiciliary tie imposed by her husband.
It is bad enough to interpret the law as empowering the husband
unilaterally to x the residence or domicile of the family, as laid down in the
Civil Code, 2 but to continue giving obeisance to his wishes even after the
rationale underlying the mutual duty of the spouses to live together has
ceased, is to close one's eyes to the stark realities of the present.
In light of the inexorable sweep of events, local and global, legislative, executive
and judicial, according more rights to women hitherto denied them and
eliminating whatever pockets of discrimination still exist in their civil, political
and social life, can it still be insisted that widows are not at liberty to choose their
domicile upon the death of their husbands but must retain the same, regardless?
I submit that a widow, like the petitioner and others similarly situated, can no
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longer be bound by the domicile of the departed husband, if at all she was before.
Neither does she automatically revert to her domicile of origin, but exercising
free will, she may opt to reestablish her domicile of origin. In returning to
Tacloban and subsequently, to Barangay Olot, Tolosa, both of which are located in
the First District of Leyte, petitioner amply demonstrated by overt acts, her
election of a domicile of choice, in this case, a reversion to her domicile of origin.
Added together, the time when she set up her domicile in the two places suced
to meet the one-year requirement to run as Representative of the First District of
Leyte.
In view of the foregoing expatiation, I vote to GRANT the petition. LLjur
"SECTION 17. The Senate and the House of Representatives shall each
have an Electoral Tribunal which shall be the sole judge of all contests
relating to the election, returns, and qualications of 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 Justice, and the remaining six shall be Members of the Senate
or the House of Representatives, as the case may be, who shall be
chosen on the basis of proportional representation from the political
parties and the parties or organizations registered under the party-list
system represented therein. The senior Justice in the Electoral Tribunal
shall be its Chairman."
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The Commission on Elections (the "COMELEC") is constitutionally bound
to enforce and administer "all laws and regulations relative to the conduct of
election . . ." (Art. IX-C, Sec. 2, Constitution) that, there being nothing said to
the contrary, should include its authority to pass upon the qualication and
disqualication prescribed by law of candidates to an elective oce. Indeed,
pre-proclamation controversies are expressly placed under the COMELEC's
jurisdiction to hear and resolve (Art. IX-C, Sec. 3, Constitution).
The matter before us specically calls for the observance of the
constitutional one-year residency requirement. This issue (whether or not
there is here such compliance), to my mind, is basically a question of fact or at
least inextricably linked to such determination. The ndings and judgment of
the COMELEC, in accordance with the long established rule and subject only to
a number of exceptions under the basic heading of "grave abuse of discretion,"
are not reviewable by this Court.
I do not nd much need to do a complex exercise on what seems to me
to be a plain matter. Generally, the term "residence" has a broader
connotation that may mean permanent (domicile), ocial (place where one's
ocial duties may require him to stay) or temporary (the place where he
sojourns during a considerable length of time). For civil law purposes, i.e., as
regards the exercise of civil rights and the fulllment of civil obligations, the
domicile of a natural person is the place of his habitual residence (see Article
50, Civil Code). In election cases, the controlling rule is that heretofore
announced by this Court in Romualdez vs. Regional Trial Court , Branch 7,
Tacloban City (226 SCRA 408, 409); thus:
"In election cases, the Court treats domicile and residence as
synonymous terms, thus: '(t)he term 'residence' as used in the election
law is synonymous with 'domicile,' which imports not only an intention to
reside in a xed place but also personal presence in that place, coupled
with conduct indicative of such intention.' 'Domicile' denotes a xed
permanent residence to which when absent for business or pleasure, or
for like reasons, one intends to return. . . . Residence thus acquired,
however, may be lost by adopting another choice of domicile. In order, in
turn, to acquire a new domicile by choice, there must concur (1)
residence or bodily presence in the new locality, (2) an intention to remain
there, and (3) an intention to abandon the old domicile. In other words,
there must basically be animus manendi coupled with animus non
revertendi. The purpose to remain in or at the domicile of choice must be
for an indenite period of time; the change of residence must be
voluntary; and the residence at the place chosen for the new domicile
must be actual."
Using the above tests, I am not convinced that we can charge the COMELEC
with having committed grave abuse of discretion in its assailed resolution.
The COMELEC's jurisdiction, in the case of congressional elections, ends when the
jurisdiction of the Electoral Tribunal concerned begins. It signies that the
protestee must have theretofore been duly proclaimed and has since become a
"member" of the Senate or the House of Representatives. The question can be
asked on whether or not the proclamation of a candidate is just a ministerial
function of the Commission on Elections dictated solely on the number of votes
cast in an election exercise. I believe, it is not. A ministerial duty is an obligation
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the performance of which, being adequately dened, does not allow the use of
further judgment or discretion. The COMELEC, in its particular case, is tasked
with the full responsibility of ascertaining all the facts and conditions such as
may be required by law before a proclamation is properly done. LLpr
The Court, on its part, should, in my view at least, refrain from any
undue encroachment on the ultimate exercise of authority by the Electoral
Tribunals on matters which, by no less than a constitutional at, are explicitly
within their exclusive domain. The nagging question, if it were otherwise,
would be the eect of the Court's peremptory pronouncement on the ability
of the Electoral Tribunal to later come up with its own judgment in a contest
"relating to the election, returns and qualication" of its members.
Prescinding from all the foregoing, I should like to next touch base on the
applicability to this case of Section 6 of Republic Act No. 6646, in relation to
Section 72 of Batas Pambansa Blg. 881, each providing thusly:
REPUBLIC ACT NO. 6646
"xxx xxx xxx
"SECTION 6. Eect of Disqualication Case. Any candidate who has
been declared by nal judgment to be disqualied shall not be voted for,
and the votes cast for him shall not be counted. If for any reason a
candidate is not declared by nal judgment before an election to be
disqualied and he is voted for and receives the winning number of votes
in such election, the Court or Commission shall continue with the trial and
hearing of the action, inquiry or protest and, upon motion of the
complainant or any intervenor, may during the pendency thereof order
the suspension of the proclamation of such candidate whenever the
evidence of his guilt is strong."
BATAS PAMBANSA BLG. 881
"xxx xxx xxx
"SECTION 72. Eects of disqualication cases and priority . The
Commission and the courts shall give priority to cases of disqualication
by reason of violation of this Act to the end that a nal decision shall be
rendered not later than seven days before the election in which the
disqualication is sought.
In my view the issue in this case is whether the Commission on Elections has
the power to disqualify candidates on the ground that they lack eligibility for the
oce to which they seek to be elected. I think that it has none and that the
qualications of candidates may be questioned only in the event they are
elected, by ling a petition for quo warranto or an election protest in the
appropriate forum, not necessarily in the COMELEC but, as in this case, in the
House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal. That the parties in this case took
part in the proceedings in the COMELEC is of no moment. Such proceedings were
unauthorized and were not rendered valid by their agreement to submit their
dispute to that body.
The various election laws will be searched in vain for authorized proceedings for
determining a candidate's qualications for an oce before his election. There
are none in the Omnibus Election Code (B.P. Blg. 881), in the Electoral Reforms
Law of 1987 (R.A. No. 6646), or in the law providing for synchronized elections
(R.A. No. 7166). There are, in other words, no provisions for pre-proclamation
contests but only election protests or quo warranto proceedings against winning
candidates. cdll
To be sure, there are provisions denominated for "disqualication," but they are
not concerned with a declaration of the ineligibility of a candidate. These
provisions are concerned with the incapacity (due to insanity, incompetence or
conviction of an oense) of a person either to be a candidate or to continue as a
candidate for public oce. There is also a provision for the denial or cancellation
of certicates of candidacy, but it applies only to cases involving false
representations as to certain matters required by law to be stated in the
certicates.
These provisions are found in the following parts of the Omnibus Election Code:
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12. Disqualications. Any person who has been declared by
competent authority insane or incompetent, or has been sentenced by
nal judgment for subversion, insurrection, rebellion or for any oense
for which he has been sentenced to a penalty of more than eighteen
months or for a crime involving moral turpitude, shall be disqualied to be
a candidate and to hold any oce, unless he has been given plenary
pardon or granted amnesty.
The disqualications to be a candidate herein provided shall be deemed
removed upon the declaration by competent authority that said insanity
or incompetence had been removed or after the expiration of a period of
ve years from his service of sentence, unless within the same period he
again becomes disqualied. (Emphasis added)
68. Disqualications. Any candidate who, in an action or protest in
which he is a party is declared by nal decision of a competent court
guilty of, or found by the Commission of having (a) given money or other
material consideration to inuence, induce or corrupt the voters or public
ocials performing electoral functions; (b) committed acts of terrorism to
enhance his candidacy; (c) spent in his election campaign an amount in
excess of that allowed by this Code; (d) solicited, received or made any
contribution prohibited under Sections 89, 95, 96, 97 and 104; or (e)
violated any of Sections 80, 83, 85, 86 and 261, paragraphs d, e, k, v,
and cc, sub-paragraph 6, shall be disqualied from continuing as a
candidate, or if he has been elected, from holding the oce. Any person
who is a permanent resident of or an immigrant to a foreign country shall
not be qualied to run for any elective oce under this Code, unless said
person has waived his status as permanent resident or immigrant of a
foreign country in accordance with the residence requirement provided
for in the election laws. (Emphasis added)
78. Petition to deny due course to or cancel a certicate of candidacy .
A veried petition seeking to deny due course or to cancel a certicate
of candidacy may be led by any person exclusively on the ground that
any material representation contained therein as required under Section
74 hereof is false. The petition may be led at any time not later than
twenty-ve days from the time of the ling of the certicate of candidacy
and shall be decided, after due notice and hearing, not later than fteen
days before the election. (Emphasis added)
(c) Those convicted by nal judgment for violating the oath of allegiance
to the Republic;
(d) Those with dual citizenship;
(e) Fugitive from justice in criminal or nonpolitical cases here or abroad;
The petition led by private respondent Cirilo Roy Montejo in the COMELEC,
while entitled "For Cancellation and Disqualication," contained no allegation
that private respondent Imelda Romualdez-Marcos made material
representations in her certicate of candidacy which were false. It sought her
disqualication on the ground that "on the basis of her Voter Registration Record
and Certicate of Candidacy, [she] is disqualied from running for the position of
Representative, considering that on election day, May 8, 1995, [she] would have
resided less than ten (10) months in the district where she is seeking to be
elected." For its part, the COMELEC's Second Division, in its resolution of April 24,
1995, cancelled her certicate of candidacy and corrected certicate of candidacy
on the basis of its nding that petitioner is "not qualied to run for the position
of Member of the House of Representatives for the First Legislative District of
Leyte" and not because of any nding that she had made false representations as
to material matters in her certicate of candidacy.
Montejo's petition before the COMELEC was therefore not a petition for
cancellation of certicate of candidacy under 78 of the Omnibus Election Code,
but essentially a petition to declare private respondent ineligible. It is important
to note this, because, as will presently be explained, proceedings under 78 have
for their purpose to disqualify a person from being a candidate, whereas quo
warranto proceedings have for their purpose to disqualify a person from holding
public oce. Jurisdiction over quo warranto proceedings involving members of
the House of Representatives is vested in the Electoral Tribunal of that body.
Indeed, in the only cases in which this Court dealt with petitions for the
cancellation of certicates of candidacy, the allegations were that the
respondent candidates had made false representations in their certicates of
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candidacy with regard to their citizenship, 1 age, 2 or residence. 3 But in the
generality of cases in which this Court passed upon the qualications of
respondents for oce, this Court did so in the context of election protests 4 or
quo warranto proceedings 5 led after the proclamation of the respondents or
protestees as winners.
Three reasons may be cited to explain the absence of an authorized
proceeding for determining before election the qualications of a candidate. cda
First is the fact that unless a candidate wins and is proclaimed elected, there is
no necessity for determining his eligibility for the oce. In contrast, whether an
individual should be disqualied as a candidate for acts constituting election
oenses (e.g., vote buying, over spending, commission of prohibited acts) is a
prejudicial question which should be determined lest he wins because of the very
acts for which his disqualication is being sought. That is why it is provided that
if the grounds for disqualication are established, a candidate will not be voted
for; if he has been voted for, the votes in his favor will not be counted; and if for
some reason he has been voted for and he has won, either he will not be
proclaimed or his proclamation will be set aside. 6
Second is the fact that the determination of a candidate's eligibility, e.g., his
citizenship or, as in this case, his domicile, may take a long time to make,
extending beyond the beginning of the term of the oce. This is amply
demonstrated in the companion case (G.R. No. 120265, Agapito A. Aquino v.
COMELEC) where the determination of Aquino's residence was still pending in
the COMELEC even after the elections of May 8, 1995. This is contrary to the
summary character of proceedings relating to certicates of candidacy. That is
why the law makes the receipt of certicates of candidacy a ministerial duty of
the COMELEC and its ocers. 7 The law is satised if candidates state in their
certicates of candidacy that they are eligible for the position which they seek to
ll, leaving the determination of their qualications to be made after the election
and only in the event they are elected. Only in cases involving charges of false
representations made in certicates of candidacy is the COMELEC given
jurisdiction.
Third is the policy underlying the prohibition against pre-proclamation
cases in elections for President, Vice President, Senators and members of the
House of Representatives. (R.A. No. 7166, 15) The purpose is to preserve the
prerogatives of the House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal and the other
Tribunals as "sole judges" under the Constitution of the election, returns and
qualications of members of Congress or of the President and Vice President,
as the case may be.
By providing in 253 for the remedy of quo warranto for determining an elected
ocial's qualications after the results of elections are proclaimed, while being
conspicuously silent about a pre-proclamation remedy based on the same ground,
the Omnibus Election Code, or OEC, by its silence underscores the policy of not
authorizing any inquiry into the qualications of candidates unless they have
been elected.
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 following:
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Grounds for disqualication. Any candidate who does not possess all
the qualications 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
disqualication may be disqualied from continuing as a candidate.
Footnotes
"1. On March 8, 1995, I led my certicate of candidacy for Member of the House
of Representatives (Congresswoman) of the First Legislative District of the province of
Leyte, which was drafted by Mr. Filomeno A. Zeta.
"As it stands now, only the Certicate of Candidacy respondent led on March 8,
1995, stands, and on the basis of the entries therein, she is disqualied to run for the
House of Representatives for failure to meet the constitutional requirement of one (1)
year of residence in the place where she wanted to be elected."
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18. Rollo, p. 78, Annex "B".
19. Rollo, p. , Annex "D".
20. 19 SCRA 966 (1967). See also, Corre v. Corre, 100 Phil 221 (1956).
28. Id., see also Ujano v. Republic, 17 SCRA 147 (1966); Nuval v. Guray, supra note
22.
29. II RECORD OF THE 1987 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION, 110 (July 22, 1986).
30. Id.
31. 199 SCRA 692 (1991).
44. The rule that the wife automatically acquires or follows her husband's domicile is
not an absolute one. A specic situation recognized in Spanish jurisprudence
involves the one in which husband acquiesces (1 Manresa 223) or gives his tacit
consent (Scaevola, Civil Code, 354).
45. 42 Phil. 54 (1921).
46. Justice Alicia Sempio-Diy recognizes the same Civil Code distinction. However,
taking another approach, she writes:
(6) The above Article (Article 69, FC) uses the term "family domicile" instead of
family residence because the spouses may have multiple residences, and the wife may
elect to remain in one of such residences, which may destroy the duty of the spouses
to live together and its corresponding benets. SEMPIO-DIY, HANDBOOK ON THE
FAMILY CODE OF THE PHILIPPINES, 102 (1988).
47. Rollo, pp. 132-133.
48. The provision reads: Section 78. Petition to deny due course or to cancel a
certicate of candidacy. A veried petition seeking to deny due course or to
cancel a certicate of candidacy may be led by any person exclusively on the
ground that any material representation contained therein as required under
Section 74 hereof is false. The petition may be led at any time not later than
twenty-ve days from the time of ling of the certicate of candidacy and shall
be decided after due notice and hearing, not later than fteen days before the
election.
51. Supra, note 39, citing Hunes v. Gold, 154 Tenn. 583; 588; 288 S.W. 353, 354.
52. SEC. 6. Eect of Disqualication Case. Any candidate who has been declared by
nal judgment to be disqualied shall not be voted for, and the votes cast for
him shall not be counted. If for any reason a candidate is not declared by nal
judgment before an election to be disqualied and he is voted for and receives
the winning number of votes in such election, the Court or Commission shall
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continue with the trial and hearing of the action, inquiry or protest and, upon
motion of the complainant or any intervenor, may during thereof order the
suspension of the proclamation of such candidate whenever the evidence of his
guilt is strong.
SEC. 7. Petition to Deny Due Course or to Cancel a Certicate of Candidacy . The
procedure hereinabove provided shall apply to petitions to deny due course to or
cancel a certicate of candidacy as provided in Section 78 of Batas Pambansa Blg. 881.
53. CONST., Art. VI, Sec. 11 states:
The Senate and the House of Representatives shall have an Electoral Tribunal
which shall be the sole judge of all questions relating to the election, returns, and
qualications of their respective Members. . . .
PUNO, J., concurring:
1. Aristotle, Ethica Nichomachea, bk., v. 3, 1131(a) (W. Ross translation, 1925 ed).
14. Supra.
15. In re Green's Estate, 191 N.Y.S. 757, 117 Misc. 800, 165 N.Y.S. 1063, 99 Misc. 582.
16. Clark, et al. v. Baker, et al., 196 SE 750, 186 Ga 65.
17. Lefcourt, Women and The Law, 1990 ed.
21. Women's Status in Philippine Society, UP Law Center, 1979, pp. 4-6.
22. In submitting the draft of the Family Code to President Corazon Aquino, the Civil
Code Revision Committee stated:
"Close to forty years of experience under the Civil Code adopted in 1949 and
changes and developments in all aspects of Filipino life since then have revealed the
unsuitability of certain provisions of that Code, implanted from foreign sources, to
Philippine culture; the unfairness, unjustness, and gaps or inadequacies of others; and
the need to attune them to contemporary developments and trends:
In particular to cite only a few instances (1) the property regime of conjugal
partnership of gains is not in accord with Filipino custom, especially in the rural areas,
which is more congenial to absolute community of property; (2) there have
considerably been more grounds for annulment of marriage by the Church than those
provided by the Code, thus giving rise to the absurd situation of several marriages
already annulled under Canon Law but still considered subsisting under the Civil Law
and making it necessary to make the grounds for annulment under both laws to
coincide; (3) unequal treatment of husband and wife as to rights and responsibilities ,
which necessitates a response to the long-standing clamor for equality between men
and women now mandated as a policy to be implemented under the New Constitution;
(4) the inadequacy of the safeguards for strengthening marriage and the family as
basic social institutions recognized as such by the New Constitution; (5) recent
developments have shown the absurdity of limiting the grounds for legal separation to
the antiquated two grounds provided under the Civil Code; (6) the need for additional
safeguards to protect our children in the matter of adoption by foreigners; and (7) to
bring our law on paternity and liation in step with or abreast of the latest scientic
discoveries." (Emphasis supplied)
23. Article 96, Family Code.
24. Article 225, Family Code.
25. Article 70, Family Code.
26. Article 71, Family Code.