46) Divinagracia v. Consolidate Broadcasting System
46) Divinagracia v. Consolidate Broadcasting System
46) Divinagracia v. Consolidate Broadcasting System
5. CA: agreed with the earlier conclusion that the complaints were indeed a collateral
G.R. No.162272 (April 7, 2009) attack on the legislative franchises of CBS and PBS and that a quo warranto action
was the proper mode to thresh out the issues raised in the complaints.
Facts:
6.
The case is super long, I focused on the revocation part only. This is how the Court
ended the decision:
We wish to make clear that the only aspect of the regulatory jurisdiction of the NTC
that we are ruling upon is its presumed power to cancel provisional authorities, CPCs
or CPCNs and other such licenses required of franchisees before they can engage in
broadcast operations. Moreover, our conclusion that the NTC has no such power is
borne not simply from the statutory language of E.O. No. 546 or the respective
stipulations in private respondents franchises, but moreso, from the application of the
strict scrutiny standard which, despite its weight towards free speech, still involves the
analysis of the competing interests of the regulator and the regulated.
In resolving the present questions, it was of marked impact to the Court that the
presumed power to cancel would lead to utterly fatal consequences to the
constitutional right to expression, as well as the legislated right of these franchisees to
broadcast. Other regulatory measures of less drastic impact will have to be assessed
on their own terms in the proper cases, and our decision today should not be
accepted or cited as a blanket shearing of the NTCs regulatory jurisdiction. In
addition, considering our own present recognition of legislative authority to regulate
broadcast media on terms more cumbersome than print media, it should not be
discounted that Congress may enact amendments to the organic law of the NTC that
would alter the legal milieu from which we adjudicated today.
Still, the Court sees all benefit and no detriment in striking this blow in favor of free
expression and of the press. While the ability of the State to broadly regulate
broadcast media is ultimately dictated by physics, regulation with a light touch evokes
a democracy mature enough to withstand competing viewpoints and tastes. Perhaps
unwittingly, the position advocated by petitioner curdles a most vital sector of the
press broadcast media within the heavy hand of the State. The argument is not
warranted by law, and it betrays the constitutional expectations on this Court to assert
lines not drawn and connect the dots around throats that are free to speak.