SEMA Vs COMELEC
SEMA Vs COMELEC
SEMA Vs COMELEC
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DECISION
CARPIO, J.:
The Case
These consolidated petitions1 seek to annul Resolution No. 7902, dated 10 May 2007, of the
Commission on Elections (COMELEC) treating Cotabato City as part of the legislative district of
the Province of Shariff Kabunsuan.2
The Facts
The Ordinance appended to the 1987 Constitution apportioned two legislative districts for the
Province of Maguindanao. The first legislative district consists of Cotabato City and eight
municipalities.3 Maguindanao forms part of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao
(ARMM), created under its Organic Act, Republic Act No. 6734 (RA 6734), as amended by
Republic Act No. 9054 (RA 9054).4 Although under the Ordinance, Cotabato City forms part of
Maguindanao’s first legislative district, it is not part of the ARMM but of Region XII, having voted
against its inclusion in the ARMM in the plebiscite held in November 1989.
On 28 August 2006, the ARMM’s legislature, the ARMM Regional Assembly, exercising its power
to create provinces under Section 19, Article VI of RA 9054,5 enacted Muslim Mindanao
Autonomy Act No. 201 (MMA Act 201) creating the Province of Shariff Kabunsuan composed of
the eight municipalities in the first district of Maguindanao. MMA Act 201 provides:
Section 1. The Municipalities of Barira, Buldon, Datu Odin Sinsuat, Kabuntalan, Matanog,
Parang, Sultan Kudarat, Sultan Mastura, and Upi are hereby separated from the Province of
Maguindanao and constituted into a distinct and independent province, which is hereby created,
to be known as the Province of Shariff Kabunsuan.
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Sec. 5. The corporate existence of this province shall commence upon the appointment by the
Regional Governor or election of the governor and majority of the regular members of the
Sangguniang Panlalawigan.
The incumbent elective provincial officials of the Province of Maguindanao shall continue to serve
their unexpired terms in the province that they will choose or where they are residents: Provided,
that where an elective position in both provinces becomes vacant as a consequence of the
creation of the Province of Shariff Kabunsuan, all incumbent elective provincial officials shall have
preference for appointment to a higher elective vacant position and for the time being be
appointed by the Regional Governor, and shall hold office until their successors shall have been
elected and qualified in the next local elections; Provided, further, that they shall continue to
receive the salaries they are receiving at the time of the approval of this Act until the new
readjustment of salaries in accordance with law. Provided, furthermore, that there shall be no
diminution in the number of the members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan of the mother
province.
Except as may be provided by national law, the existing legislative district, which includes
Cotabato as a part thereof, shall remain.
Later, three new municipalities6 were carved out of the original nine municipalities constituting
Shariff Kabunsuan, bringing its total number of municipalities to 11. Thus, what was left of
Maguindanao were the municipalities constituting its second legislative district. Cotabato City,
although part of Maguindanao’s first legislative district, is not part of the Province of
Maguindanao.
On 6 February 2007, the Sangguniang Panlungsod of Cotabato City passed Resolution No. 3999
requesting the COMELEC to "clarify the status of Cotabato City in view of the conversion of the
First District of Maguindanao into a regular province" under MMA Act 201.
In answer to Cotabato City’s query, the COMELEC issued Resolution No. 07-0407 on 6 March
2007 "maintaining the status quo with Cotabato City as part of Shariff Kabunsuan in the First
Legislative District of Maguindanao." Resolution No. 07-0407, which adopted the
recommendation of the COMELEC’s Law Department under a Memorandum dated 27 February
2007,7 provides in pertinent parts:
Considering the foregoing, the Commission RESOLVED, as it hereby resolves, to adopt the
recommendation of the Law Department that pending the enactment of the appropriate law by
Congress, to maintain the status quo with Cotabato City as part of Shariff Kabunsuan in the First
Legislative District of Maguindanao. (Emphasis supplied)
However, in preparation for the 14 May 2007 elections, the COMELEC promulgated on 29 March
2007 Resolution No. 7845 stating that Maguindanao’s first legislative district is composed only of
Cotabato City because of the enactment of MMA Act 201.8
On 10 May 2007, the COMELEC issued Resolution No. 7902, subject of these petitions,
amending Resolution No. 07-0407 by renaming the legislative district in question as "Shariff
Kabunsuan Province with Cotabato City (formerly First District of Maguindanao with Cotabato
City)."9
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In G.R. No. 177597, Sema, who was a candidate in the 14 May 2007 elections for Representative
of "Shariff Kabunsuan with Cotabato City," prayed for the nullification of COMELEC Resolution
No. 7902 and the exclusion from canvassing of the votes cast in Cotabato City for that office.
Sema contended that Shariff Kabunsuan is entitled to one representative in Congress under
Section 5 (3), Article VI of the Constitution10 and Section 3 of the Ordinance appended to the
Constitution.11 Thus, Sema asserted that the COMELEC acted without or in excess of its
jurisdiction in issuing Resolution No. 7902 which maintained the status quo in Maguindanao’s first
legislative district despite the COMELEC’s earlier directive in Resolution No. 7845 designating
Cotabato City as the lone component of Maguindanao’s reapportioned first legislative
district.12 Sema further claimed that in issuing Resolution No. 7902, the COMELEC usurped
Congress’ power to create or reapportion legislative districts.
In its Comment, the COMELEC, through the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG), chose not to
reach the merits of the case and merely contended that (1) Sema wrongly availed of the writ of
certiorari to nullify COMELEC Resolution No. 7902 because the COMELEC issued the same in
the exercise of its administrative, not quasi-judicial, power and (2) Sema’s prayer for the writ of
prohibition in G.R. No. 177597 became moot with the proclamation of respondent Didagen P.
Dilangalen (respondent Dilangalen) on 1 June 2007 as representative of the legislative district of
Shariff Kabunsuan Province with Cotabato City.
In his Comment, respondent Dilangalen countered that Sema is estopped from questioning
COMELEC Resolution No. 7902 because in her certificate of candidacy filed on 29 March 2007,
Sema indicated that she was seeking election as representative of "Shariff Kabunsuan including
Cotabato City." Respondent Dilangalen added that COMELEC Resolution No. 7902 is
constitutional because it did not apportion a legislative district for Shariff Kabunsuan or
reapportion the legislative districts in Maguindanao but merely renamed Maguindanao’s first
legislative district. Respondent Dilangalen further claimed that the COMELEC could not
reapportion Maguindanao’s first legislative district to make Cotabato City its sole component unit
as the power to reapportion legislative districts lies exclusively with Congress, not to mention that
Cotabato City does not meet the minimum population requirement under Section 5 (3), Article VI
of the Constitution for the creation of a legislative district within a city. 13
Sema filed a Consolidated Reply controverting the matters raised in respondents’ Comments and
reiterating her claim that the COMELEC acted ultra vires in issuing Resolution No. 7902.
In the Resolution of 4 September 2007, the Court required the parties in G.R. No. 177597 to
comment on the issue of whether a province created by the ARMM Regional Assembly under
Section 19, Article VI of RA 9054 is entitled to one representative in the House of
Representatives without need of a national law creating a legislative district for such new
province. The parties submitted their compliance as follows:
(1) Sema answered the issue in the affirmative on the following grounds: (a) the Court
in Felwa v. Salas14stated that "when a province is created by statute, the corresponding
representative district comes into existence neither by authority of that statute — which
cannot provide otherwise — nor by apportionment, but by operation of the Constitution,
without a reapportionment"; (b) Section 462 of Republic Act No. 7160 (RA 7160) "affirms"
the apportionment of a legislative district incident to the creation of a province; and (c)
Section 5 (3), Article VI of the Constitution and Section 3 of the Ordinance appended to the
Constitution mandate the apportionment of a legislative district in newly created provinces.
(2) The COMELEC, again represented by the OSG, apparently abandoned its earlier
stance on the propriety of issuing Resolution Nos. 07-0407 and 7902 and joined causes
with Sema, contending that Section 5 (3), Article VI of the Constitution is "self-executing."
Thus, every new province created by the ARMM Regional Assembly is ipso facto entitled
to one representative in the House of Representatives even in the absence of a national
law; and
(3) Respondent Dilangalen answered the issue in the negative on the following grounds:
(a) the "province" contemplated in Section 5 (3), Article VI of the Constitution is one that is
created by an act of Congress taking into account the provisions in RA 7160 on the
creation of provinces; (b) Section 3, Article IV of RA 9054 withheld from the ARMM
Regional Assembly the power to enact measures relating to national elections, which
encompasses the apportionment of legislative districts for members of the House of
Representatives; (c) recognizing a legislative district in every province the ARMM Regional
Assembly creates will lead to the disproportionate representation of the ARMM in the
House of Representatives as the Regional Assembly can create provinces without regard
to the requirements in Section 461 of RA 7160; and (d) Cotabato City, which has a
population of less than 250,000, is not entitled to a representative in the House of
Representatives.
On 27 November 2007, the Court heard the parties in G.R. No. 177597 in oral arguments on the
following issues: (1) whether Section 19, Article VI of RA 9054, delegating to the ARMM Regional
Assembly the power to create provinces, is constitutional; and (2) if in the affirmative, whether a
province created under Section 19, Article VI of RA 9054 is entitled to one representative in the
House of Representatives without need of a national law creating a legislative district for such
new province.15
In compliance with the Resolution dated 27 November 2007, the parties in G.R. No. 177597 filed
their respective Memoranda on the issues raised in the oral arguments.16 On the question of the
constitutionality of Section 19, Article VI of RA 9054, the parties in G.R. No. 177597 adopted the
following positions:
(1) Sema contended that Section 19, Article VI of RA 9054 is constitutional (a) as a valid
delegation by Congress to the ARMM of the power to create provinces under Section 20
(9), Article X of the Constitution granting to the autonomous regions, through their organic
acts, legislative powers over "other matters as may be authorized by law for the promotion
of the general welfare of the people of the region" and (b) as an amendment to Section 6 of
RA 7160.17 However, Sema concedes that, if taken literally, the grant in Section 19, Article
VI of RA 9054 to the ARMM Regional Assembly of the power to "prescribe standards lower
than those mandated" in RA 7160 in the creation of provinces contravenes Section 10,
Article X of the Constitution.18 Thus, Sema proposed that Section 19 "should be construed
as prohibiting the Regional Assembly from prescribing standards x x x that do not comply
with the minimum criteria" under RA 7160.19
(3) The COMELEC, through the OSG, joined causes with respondent Dilangalen (thus
effectively abandoning the position the COMELEC adopted in its Compliance with the
Resolution of 4 September 2007) and contended that Section 19, Article VI of RA 9054 is
unconstitutional because (a) it contravenes Section 10 and Section 6,20 Article X of the
Constitution and (b) the power to create provinces was withheld from the autonomous
regions under Section 20, Article X of the Constitution.
On the question of whether a province created under Section 19, Article VI of RA 9054 is entitled
to one representative in the House of Representatives without need of a national law creating a
legislative district for such new province, Sema and respondent Dilangalen reiterated in their
Memoranda the positions they adopted in their Compliance with the Resolution of 4 September
2007. The COMELEC deemed it unnecessary to submit its position on this issue considering its
stance that Section 19, Article VI of RA 9054 is unconstitutional.
The pendency of the petition in G.R. No. 178628 was disclosed during the oral arguments on 27
November 2007. Thus, in the Resolution of 19 February 2008, the Court ordered G.R. No.
178628 consolidated with G.R. No. 177597. The petition in G.R. No. 178628 echoed Sema's
contention that the COMELEC acted ultra vires in issuing Resolution No. 7902 depriving the
voters of Cotabato City of a representative in the House of Representatives. In its Comment to
the petition in G.R. No. 178628, the COMELEC, through the OSG, maintained the validity of
COMELEC Resolution No. 7902 as a temporary measure pending the enactment by Congress of
the "appropriate law."
The Issues
(A) Preliminarily –
(1) whether the writs of Certiorari, Prohibition, and Mandamus are proper to test the
constitutionality of COMELEC Resolution No. 7902; and
(1) whether Section 19, Article VI of RA 9054, delegating to the ARMM Regional
Assembly the power to create provinces, cities, municipalities and barangays, is
constitutional; and
(2) if in the affirmative, whether a province created by the ARMM Regional Assembly
under MMA Act 201 pursuant to Section 19, Article VI of RA 9054 is entitled to one
representative in the House of Representatives without need of a national law
creating a legislative district for such province.
II. In G.R No. 177597 and G.R No. 178628, whether COMELEC Resolution No. 7902 is
valid for maintaining the status quo in the first legislative district of Maguindanao (as
"Shariff Kabunsuan Province with Cotabato City [formerly First District of Maguindanao
with Cotabato City]"), despite the creation of the Province of Shariff Kabunsuan out of such
district (excluding Cotabato City).
The petitions have no merit. We rule that (1) Section 19, Article VI of RA 9054 is
unconstitutional insofar as it grants to the ARMM Regional Assembly the power to create
provinces and cities; (2) MMA Act 201 creating the Province of Shariff Kabunsuan is void;
and (3) COMELEC Resolution No. 7902 is valid.
The purpose of the writ of Certiorari is to correct grave abuse of discretion by "any tribunal, board,
or officer exercising judicial or quasi-judicial functions."21 On the other hand, the writ of
Mandamus will issue to compel a tribunal, corporation, board, officer, or person to perform an act
"which the law specifically enjoins as a duty."22 True, the COMELEC did not issue Resolution No.
7902 in the exercise of its judicial or quasi-judicial functions.23 Nor is there a law which specifically
enjoins the COMELEC to exclude from canvassing the votes cast in Cotabato City for
representative of "Shariff Kabunsuan Province with Cotabato City." These, however, do not justify
the outright dismissal of the petition in G.R. No. 177597 because Sema also prayed for the
issuance of the writ of Prohibition and we have long recognized this writ as proper for testing the
constitutionality of election laws, rules, and regulations.24
There is also no merit in the claim that respondent Dilangalen’s proclamation as winner in the 14
May 2007 elections for representative of "Shariff Kabunsuan Province with Cotabato City" mooted
this petition. This case does not concern respondent Dilangalen’s election. Rather, it involves an
inquiry into the validity of COMELEC Resolution No. 7902, as well as the constitutionality of MMA
Act 201 and Section 19, Article VI of RA 9054. Admittedly, the outcome of this petition, one way
or another, determines whether the votes cast in Cotabato City for representative of the district of
"Shariff Kabunsuan Province with Cotabato City" will be included in the canvassing of ballots.
However, this incidental consequence is no reason for us not to proceed with the resolution of the
novel issues raised here. The Court’s ruling in these petitions affects not only the recently
concluded elections but also all the other succeeding elections for the office in question, as well
as the power of the ARMM Regional Assembly to create in the future additional provinces.
Sec. 10. No province, city, municipality, or barangay may be created, divided, merged, abolished
or its boundary substantially altered except in accordance with the criteria established in the local
government code and subject to approval by a majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite in the
political units directly affected.
Thus, the creation of any of the four local government units – province, city, municipality or
barangay – must comply with three conditions. First, the creation of a local government unit must
follow the criteria fixed in the Local Government Code. Second, such creation must not conflict
with any provision of the Constitution. Third, there must be a plebiscite in the political units
affected.
There is neither an express prohibition nor an express grant of authority in the Constitution for
Congress to delegate to regional or local legislative bodies the power to create local government
units. However, under its plenary legislative powers, Congress can delegate to local legislative
bodies the power to create local government units, subject to reasonable standards and provided
no conflict arises with any provision of the Constitution. In fact, Congress has delegated to
provincial boards, and city and municipal councils, the power to create barangays within their
jurisdiction,25 subject to compliance with the criteria established in the Local Government Code,
and the plebiscite requirement in Section 10, Article X of the Constitution. However, under the
Local Government Code, "only x x x an Act of Congress" can create provinces, cities or
municipalities.26
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Under Section 19, Article VI of RA 9054, Congress delegated to the ARMM Regional Assembly
the power to create provinces, cities, municipalities and barangays within the ARMM. Congress
made the delegation under its plenary legislative powers because the power to create local
government units is not one of the express legislative powers granted by the Constitution to
regional legislative bodies.27 In the present case, the question arises whether the delegation to
the ARMM Regional Assembly of the power to create provinces, cities, municipalities and
barangays conflicts with any provision of the Constitution.
There is no provision in the Constitution that conflicts with the delegation to regional legislative
bodies of the power to create municipalities and barangays, provided Section 10, Article X of the
Constitution is followed. However, the creation of provinces and cities is another matter. Section 5
(3), Article VI of the Constitution provides, "Each city with a population of at least two hundred fifty
thousand, or each province, shall have at least one representative" in the House of
Representatives. Similarly, Section 3 of the Ordinance appended to the Constitution provides,
"Any province that may hereafter be created, or any city whose population may hereafter
increase to more than two hundred fifty thousand shall be entitled in the immediately following
election to at least one Member x x x."
Clearly, a province cannot be created without a legislative district because it will violate Section 5
(3), Article VI of the Constitution as well as Section 3 of the Ordinance appended to the
Constitution. For the same reason, a city with a population of 250,000 or more cannot also be
created without a legislative district. Thus, the power to create a province, or a city with a
population of 250,000 or more, requires also the power to create a legislative district. Even the
creation of a city with a population of less than 250,000 involves the power to create a legislative
district because once the city’s population reaches 250,000, the city automatically becomes
entitled to one representative under Section 5 (3), Article VI of the Constitution and Section 3 of
the Ordinance appended to the Constitution. Thus, the power to create a province or city
inherently involves the power to create a legislative district.
For Congress to delegate validly the power to create a province or city, it must also validly
delegate at the same time the power to create a legislative district. The threshold issue then is,
can Congress validly delegate to the ARMM Regional Assembly the power to create legislative
districts for the House of Representatives? The answer is in the negative.
Legislative Districts are Created or Reapportioned
Only by an Act of Congress
Under the present Constitution, as well as in past28 Constitutions, the power to increase the
allowable membership in the House of Representatives, and to reapportion legislative districts, is
vested exclusively in Congress. Section 5, Article VI of the Constitution provides:
SECTION 5. (1) The House of Representatives shall be composed of not more than two
hundred and fifty members, unless otherwise fixed by law, who shall be elected from
legislative districts apportioned among the provinces, cities, and the Metropolitan Manila area in
accordance with the number of their respective inhabitants, and on the basis of a uniform and
progressive ratio, and those who, as provided by law, shall be elected through a party-list system
of registered national, regional, and sectoral parties or organizations.
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(3) Each legislative district shall comprise, as far as practicable, contiguous, compact, and
adjacent territory. Each city with a population of at least two hundred fifty thousand, or
each province, shall have at least one representative.
(4) Within three years following the return of every census, the Congress shall make a
reapportionment of legislative districts based on the standards provided in this section.
(Emphasis supplied)
Section 5 (1), Article VI of the Constitution vests in Congress the power to increase, through a
law, the allowable membership in the House of Representatives. Section 5 (4) empowers
Congress to reapportion legislative districts. The power to reapportion legislative districts
necessarily includes the power to create legislative districts out of existing ones. Congress
exercises these powers through a law that Congress itself enacts, and not through a law that
regional or local legislative bodies enact. The allowable membership of the House of
Representatives can be increased, and new legislative districts of Congress can be created, only
through a national law passed by Congress. In Montejo v. COMELEC,29 we held that the "power
of redistricting x x x is traditionally regarded as part of the power (of Congress) to make laws,"
and thus is vested exclusively in Congress.
This textual commitment to Congress of the exclusive power to create or reapportion legislative
districts is logical. Congress is a national legislature and any increase in its allowable
membership or in its incumbent membership through the creation of legislative districts must be
embodied in a national law. Only Congress can enact such a law. It would be anomalous for
regional or local legislative bodies to create or reapportion legislative districts for a national
legislature like Congress. An inferior legislative body, created by a superior legislative body,
cannot change the membership of the superior legislative body.
The creation of the ARMM, and the grant of legislative powers to its Regional Assembly under its
organic act, did not divest Congress of its exclusive authority to create legislative districts. This is
clear from the Constitution and the ARMM Organic Act, as amended. Thus, Section 20, Article X
of the Constitution provides:
SECTION 20. Within its territorial jurisdiction and subject to the provisions of this Constitution and
national laws, the organic act of autonomous regions shall provide for legislative powers over:
(9) Such other matters as may be authorized by law for the promotion of the general
welfare of the people of the region.
On the other hand, Section 3, Article IV of RA 9054 amending the ARMM Organic Act, provides,
"The Regional Assembly may exercise legislative power x x x except on the following
matters: x x x (k) National elections. x x x." Since the ARMM Regional Assembly has no
legislative power to enact laws relating to national elections, it cannot create a legislative district
whose representative is elected in national elections. Whenever Congress enacts a law creating
a legislative district, the first representative is always elected in the "next national elections" from
the effectivity of the law.30
Indeed, the office of a legislative district representative to Congress is a national office, and its
occupant, a Member of the House of Representatives, is a national official.31 It would be
incongruous for a regional legislative body like the ARMM Regional Assembly to create a national
office when its legislative powers extend only to its regional territory. The office of a district
representative is maintained by national funds and the salary of its occupant is paid out of
national funds. It is a self-evident inherent limitation on the legislative powers of every local or
regional legislative body that it can only create local or regional offices, respectively, and it can
never create a national office.
To allow the ARMM Regional Assembly to create a national office is to allow its legislative powers
to operate outside the ARMM’s territorial jurisdiction. This violates Section 20, Article X of the
Constitution which expressly limits the coverage of the Regional Assembly’s legislative powers
"[w]ithin its territorial jurisdiction x x x."
The ARMM Regional Assembly itself, in creating Shariff Kabunsuan, recognized the exclusive
nature of Congress’ power to create or reapportion legislative districts by abstaining from creating
a legislative district for Shariff Kabunsuan. Section 5 of MMA Act 201 provides that:
Except as may be provided by national law, the existing legislative district, which includes
Cotabato City as a part thereof, shall remain. (Emphasis supplied)
However, a province cannot legally be created without a legislative district because the
Constitution mandates that "each province shall have at least one representative." Thus, the
creation of the Province of Shariff Kabunsuan without a legislative district is unconstitutional.
Sema, petitioner in G.R. No. 177597, contends that Section 5 (3), Article VI of the Constitution,
which provides:
Each legislative district shall comprise, as far as practicable, contiguous, compact, and adjacent
territory. Each city with a population of at least two hundred fifty thousand, or each province, shall
have at least one representative. (Emphasis supplied)
Any province that may hereafter be created, or any city whose population may hereafter
increase to more than two hundred fifty thousand shall be entitled in the immediately following
election to at least one Member or such number of Members as it may be entitled to on the
basis of the number of its inhabitants and according to the standards set forth in
paragraph (3), Section 5 of Article VI of the Constitution. The number of Members
apportioned to the province out of which such new province was created or where the city, whose
population has so increased, is geographically located shall be correspondingly adjusted by the
Commission on Elections but such adjustment shall not be made within one hundred and twenty
days before the election. (Emphasis supplied)
serve as bases for the conclusion that the Province of Shariff Kabunsuan, created on 29 October
2006, is automatically entitled to one member in the House of Representatives in the 14 May
2007 elections. As further support for her stance, petitioner invokes the statement in Felwa that
"when a province is created by statute, the corresponding representative district comes into
existence neither by authority of that statute — which cannot provide otherwise — nor by
apportionment, but by operation of the Constitution, without a reapportionment."
First. The issue in Felwa, among others, was whether Republic Act No. 4695 (RA 4695), creating
the provinces of Benguet, Mountain Province, Ifugao, and Kalinga-Apayao and providing for
congressional representation in the old and new provinces, was unconstitutional for "creati[ng]
congressional districts without the apportionment provided in the Constitution." The Court
answered in the negative, thus:
"The House of Representatives shall be composed of not more than one hundred and twenty
Members who shall be apportioned among the several provinces as nearly as may be according
to the number of their respective inhabitants, but each province shall have at least one Member.
The Congress shall by law make an apportionment within three years after the return of every
enumeration, and not otherwise. Until such apportionment shall have been made, the House of
Representatives shall have the same number of Members as that fixed by law for the National
Assembly, who shall be elected by the qualified electors from the present Assembly districts.
Each representative district shall comprise as far as practicable, contiguous and compact
territory."
Pursuant to this Section, a representative district may come into existence: (a) indirectly,
through the creation of a province — for "each province shall have at least one member"
in the House of Representatives; or (b) by direct creation of several representative
districts within a province. The requirements concerning the apportionment of representative
districts and the territory thereof refer only to the second method of creation of representative
districts, and do not apply to those incidental to the creation of provinces, under the first method.
This is deducible, not only from the general tenor of the provision above quoted, but, also, from
the fact that the apportionment therein alluded to refers to that which is made by an Act of
Congress. Indeed, when a province is created by statute, the corresponding representative
district, comes into existence neither by authority of that statute — which cannot provide
otherwise — nor by apportionment, but by operation of the Constitution, without a
reapportionment.
There is no constitutional limitation as to the time when, territory of, or other conditions under
which a province may be created, except, perhaps, if the consequence thereof were to exceed
the maximum of 120 representative districts prescribed in the Constitution, which is not the effect
of the legislation under consideration. As a matter of fact, provinces have been created or
subdivided into other provinces, with the consequent creation of additional representative
districts, without complying with the aforementioned requirements. 32 (Emphasis supplied)
Thus, the Court sustained the constitutionality of RA 4695 because (1) it validly created legislative
districts "indirectly" through a special law enacted by Congress creating a province and (2) the
creation of the legislative districts will not result in breaching the maximum number of legislative
districts provided under the 1935 Constitution. Felwa does not apply to the present case because
in Felwa the new provinces were created by a national law enacted by Congress itself. Here,
the new province was created merely by a regional law enacted by the ARMM Regional
Assembly.
What Felwa teaches is that the creation of a legislative district by Congress does not emanate
alone from Congress’ power to reapportion legislative districts, but also from Congress’ power to
create provinces which cannot be created without a legislative district. Thus, when a province is
created, a legislative district is created by operation of the Constitution because the Constitution
provides that "each province shall have at least one representative" in the House of
Representatives. This does not detract from the constitutional principle that the power to create
legislative districts belongs exclusively to Congress. It merely prevents any other legislative body,
except Congress, from creating provinces because for a legislative body to create a province
such legislative body must have the power to create legislative districts. In short, only an act of
Congress can trigger the creation of a legislative district by operation of the Constitution. Thus,
only Congress has the power to create, or trigger the creation of, a legislative district.
Moreover, if as Sema claims MMA Act 201 apportioned a legislative district to Shariff Kabunsuan
upon its creation, this will leave Cotabato City as the lone component of the first legislative district
of Maguindanao. However, Cotabato City cannot constitute a legislative district by itself because
as of the census taken in 2000, it had a population of only 163,849. To constitute Cotabato City
alone as the surviving first legislative district of Maguindanao will violate Section 5 (3), Article VI
of the Constitution which requires that "[E]ach city with a population of at least two hundred fifty
thousand x x x, shall have at least one representative."
Second. Sema’s theory also undermines the composition and independence of the House of
Representatives. Under Section 19,33 Article VI of RA 9054, the ARMM Regional Assembly can
create provinces and cities within the ARMM with or without regard to the criteria fixed in Section
461 of RA 7160, namely: minimum annual income of ₱20,000,000, and minimum contiguous
territory of 2,000 square kilometers or minimum population of 250,000. 34The following scenarios
thus become distinct possibilities:
(1) An inferior legislative body like the ARMM Regional Assembly can create 100 or more
provinces and thus increase the membership of a superior legislative body, the House of
Representatives, beyond the maximum limit of 250 fixed in the Constitution (unless a
national law provides otherwise);
(3) Representatives from the ARMM provinces can become the majority in the House of
Representatives through the ARMM Regional Assembly’s continuous creation of provinces
or cities within the ARMM.
The following exchange during the oral arguments of the petition in G.R. No. 177597 highlights
the absurdity of Sema’s position that the ARMM Regional Assembly can create provinces:
Justice Carpio:
So, you mean to say [a] Local Government can create legislative district[s] and pack Congress
with their own representatives [?]
Justice Carpio:
So, [the] Regional Assembly of [the] ARMM can create and create x x x provinces x x x and,
therefore, they can have thirty-five (35) new representatives in the House of Representatives
without Congress agreeing to it, is that what you are saying? That can be done, under your
theory[?]
Atty. Vistan II:
Justice Carpio:
Under your theory, the ARMM legislature can create thirty-five (35) new provinces, there may be
x x x [only] one hundred thousand (100,000) [population], x x x, and they will each have one
representative x x x to Congress without any national law, is that what you are saying?
Without law passed by Congress, yes, Your Honor, that is what we are saying.
xxxx
Justice Carpio:
So, they can also create one thousand (1000) new provinces, sen[d] one thousand (1000)
representatives to the House of Representatives without a national law[,] that is legally possible,
correct?
Neither the framers of the 1987 Constitution in adopting the provisions in Article X on regional
autonomy,37 nor Congress in enacting RA 9054, envisioned or intended these disastrous
consequences that certainly would wreck the tri-branch system of government under our
Constitution. Clearly, the power to create or reapportion legislative districts cannot be delegated
by Congress but must be exercised by Congress itself. Even the ARMM Regional Assembly
recognizes this.
The Constitution empowered Congress to create or reapportion legislative districts, not the
regional assemblies. Section 3 of the Ordinance to the Constitution which states, "[A]ny province
that may hereafter be created x x x shall be entitled in the immediately following election to at
least one Member," refers to a province created by Congress itself through a national law. The
reason is that the creation of a province increases the actual membership of the House of
Representatives, an increase that only Congress can decide. Incidentally, in the present 14th
Congress, there are 21938 district representatives out of the maximum 250 seats in the House of
Representatives. Since party-list members shall constitute 20 percent of total membership of the
House, there should at least be 50 party-list seats available in every election in case 50 party-list
candidates are proclaimed winners. This leaves only 200 seats for district representatives, much
less than the 219 incumbent district representatives. Thus, there is a need now for Congress to
increase by law the allowable membership of the House, even before Congress can create new
provinces.
It is axiomatic that organic acts of autonomous regions cannot prevail over the Constitution.
Section 20, Article X of the Constitution expressly provides that the legislative powers of regional
assemblies are limited "[w]ithin its territorial jurisdiction and subject to the provisions of the
Constitution and national laws, x x x." The Preamble of the ARMM Organic Act (RA 9054) itself
states that the ARMM Government is established "within the framework of the Constitution." This
follows Section 15, Article X of the Constitution which mandates that the ARMM "shall be
created x x x within the framework of this Constitution and the national sovereignty as well
as territorial integrity of the Republic of the Philippines."
The present case involves the creation of a local government unit that necessarily involves also
the creation of a legislative district. The Court will not pass upon the constitutionality of the
creation of municipalities and barangays that does not comply with the criteria established in
Section 461 of RA 7160, as mandated in Section 10, Article X of the Constitution, because the
creation of such municipalities and barangays does not involve the creation of legislative districts.
We leave the resolution of this issue to an appropriate case.
In summary, we rule that Section 19, Article VI of RA 9054, insofar as it grants to the ARMM
Regional Assembly the power to create provinces and cities, is void for being contrary to Section
5 of Article VI and Section 20 of Article X of the Constitution, as well as Section 3 of the
Ordinance appended to the Constitution. Only Congress can create provinces and cities because
the creation of provinces and cities necessarily includes the creation of legislative districts, a
power only Congress can exercise under Section 5, Article VI of the Constitution and Section 3 of
the Ordinance appended to the Constitution. The ARMM Regional Assembly cannot create a
province without a legislative district because the Constitution mandates that every province shall
have a legislative district. Moreover, the ARMM Regional Assembly cannot enact a law creating a
national office like the office of a district representative of Congress because the legislative
powers of the ARMM Regional Assembly operate only within its territorial jurisdiction as provided
in Section 20, Article X of the Constitution. Thus, we rule that MMA Act 201, enacted by the
ARMM Regional Assembly and creating the Province of Shariff Kabunsuan, is void.
Consequently, we hold that COMELEC Resolution No. 7902, preserving the geographic and
legislative district of the First District of Maguindanao with Cotabato City, is valid as it merely
complies with Section 5 of Article VI and Section 20 of Article X of the Constitution, as well as
Section 1 of the Ordinance appended to the Constitution.
Let a copy of this ruling be served on the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House
of Representatives.
SO ORDERED.
ANTONIO T. CARPIO
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
REYNATO S. PUNO
Chief Justice
ARTURO D. BRION
Associate Justice
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution, I certify that the conclusions in the above
Decision had been reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the
opinion of the Court.
REYNATO S. PUNO
Chief Justice
Footnotes
1
In G.R. No. 177597, for the writs of certiorari, prohibition and mandamus; in G.R. No.
178628, for "declaratory relief" and for the writs of prohibition and mandamus.
2The petitioner in G.R. No. 177597, Bai Sandra S. A. Sema (Sema), further seeks to
compel the COMELEC to exclude from the canvassing the votes cast in Cotabato City for
representative of the legislative district in question in the 14 May 2007 elections. On the
other hand, the petitioner in G.R. No. 178628, Perfecto Marquez, prays that the Court
order the COMELEC to conduct a special election for representative of the "First District of
Maguindanao with Cotabato City."
3Barira, Buldon, Datu Odin Sinsuat, Kabuntalan, Matanog, Parang, Sultan Kudarat, and
Upi. The second legislative district is composed of 19 municipalities (Talitay, Talayan,
Guindulungan, Datu Saudi Ampatuan, Datu Piang, Shariff Aguak, Datu Unsay,
Mamasapano, South Upi, Ampatuan, Datu Abdullah Sangki, Buluan, Datu Paglas, Gen,
S.K. Pendatun, Sultan Sa Barongis, Rajah Buayan, Pagalungan, Pagagawan and Paglat).
4
The enactment of the organic acts for the autonomous regions of the Cordilleras and
Muslim Mindanao is mandated under Sections 18 and 19, Article X of the 1987
Constitution.
5
The provision reads:
The holding of a plebiscite to determine the will of the majority of the voters of the
areas affected by the creation, division, merger, or whose boundaries are being
altered as required by Republic Act No. 7160, the Local Government Code of 1991,
shall, however, be observed.
The Regional Assembly may also change the names of local government units,
public places and institutions, and declare regional holidays. (Emphasis supplied)
6Sultan Mastura (created from Sultan Kudarat), Northern Kabuntulan (created from
Kabuntulan) and Datu Blah Sinsuat (created from Upi).
7
The Memorandum reads in pertinent parts:
The record shows the former province of Maguindanao was divided into two new
provinces (Shariff Kabunsuan and Maguindanao), in view of Muslim Mindanao
Autonomy Act (MMAA) No. 201, which authority was conferred to under Section 17,
Article VI of Republic Act No. 9054 giving the ARMM, thru its Regional Legislative
Assembly, the power to legislate laws including the enactment of the Local
Government Code of ARMM.
It must be emphasized that Cotabato City is not included as part of ARMM although
geographically located within the first district of the former Maguindanao province.
Cotabato City is not voting for provincial officials. This is the reason why Cotabato
City was not specifically mentioned as part of the newly created province of Shariff
Kabunsuan.
Geographically speaking since [sic] Cotabato City is located within the newly created
province of Shariff Kabunsuan having been bounded by municipalities of Sultan
Kudarat, Datu Odin Sinsuat and Kabuntalan as its nearest neighbors. Following the
rule in establishing legislative district, it shall comprise, as far as practicable,
contiguous, compact and adjacent territory.
However, legally speaking, it may arise question of legality [sic] if Cotabato City will
be appended as part of the newly created Shariff Kabunsuan province. Under our
Constitution [it is] only Congress that shall make a reapportionment of legislative
districts based on the standards provided for under Section 5(1) of Article VI.
xxxx
8
Resolution No. 7845 pertinently provides:
WHEREAS, the Province of Maguindanao consists of two legislative districts, with
Cotabato City as part of the first legislative district.
WHEREAS, Muslim Mindanao Autonomy Act No. 201 provided for the creation of
the new Province of Shariff Kabunsuan comprising the municipalities of Barira,
Buldon, Datu Odin Sinsuat, Kabuntalan, Matanog, Parang, Sultan Kudarat, Sultan
Mastura and Upi, all of the first legislative district of the mother Province of
Maguindanao, except Cotabato City which is not part of the Autonomous Region in
Muslim Mindanao; while the remaining municipalities of Talisay, Talayan,
Guindulungan, Datu Saudi Ampatuan, Datu Piang, Shariff Aguak, Datu Unsay,
Mamasapano, South Upi, Ampatuan, Datu Abdullah Sangki, Buluan, Datu Paglas,
Gen. S. K. Pendatun, Sultan Sa Barongis, Rajah Buayan, Pagalungan, Pagagawan,
and Paglat, all of the second legislative district of the mother Province of
Maguindanao, shall remain with said province;
WHEREAS, by reason of said provision of MMA Act No. 201, the first legislative
district of the Province of Maguindanao is now made up of Cotabato City only, and
its second legislative district, the municipalities of Talisay, Talayan, Guindulungan,
Datu Saudi Ampatuan, Datu Piang, Shariff Aguak, Datu Unsay, Mamasapano, South
Upi, Ampatuan, Datu Abdullah Sangki, Buluan, Datu Paglas, Gen. S. K. Pendatun,
Sultan Sa Barongis, Rajah Buayan, Pagalungan, Pagagawan, and Paglat[.]
(Emphasis supplied)
In the earlier Resolution No. 7801, dated 11 January 2007, the COMELEC allocated
one legislative seat each for the provinces of Maguindanao and Shariff Kabunsuan
for the 14 May 2007 elections.
9
Resolution No. 7902 reads in full:
This pertains to the amendment of Minute Resolution No. 07-0407 dated March 6,
2007, entitled, "IN THE MATTER OF THE MEMORANDUM OF ATTY. WYNNE B.
ASDALA, ACTING DIRECTOR III, LAW DEPARTMENT, RELATIVE TO THE
STUDY/RECOMMENDATION OF SAID DEPARTMENT RE: CONVERSION OF
THE FIRST DISTRICT OF MAGUINDANAO INTO A REGULAR PROVINCE PER
MINUTE RESOLUTION NO. 07-0297 DATED FEBRUARY 20, 2007". The
dispositive portion of which reads:
Let the Executive Director advise the Sangguniang Panlalawigan of Cotabato City
accordingly. (Emphasis in the original)
10"Each legislative district shall comprise, as far as practicable, contiguous, compact, and
adjacent territory. Each city with a population of at least two hundred fifty thousand, or
each province, shall have at least one representative."
11
"Any province that may hereafter be created, or any city whose population may hereafter
increase to more than two hundred fifty thousand shall be entitled in the immediately
following election to at least one Member or such number of Members as it may be entitled
to on the basis of the number of its inhabitants and according to the standards set forth in
paragraph (3), Section 5 of Article VI of the Constitution. The number of Members
apportioned to the province out of which such new province was created or where the city,
whose population has so increased, is geographically located shall be correspondingly
adjusted by the Commission on Elections but such adjustment shall not be made within
one hundred and twenty days before the election."
12Consistent with her claim that Cotabato City is not part of Shariff Kabunsuan’s legislative
district, petitioner filed with the COMELEC a petition for the disqualification of respondent
Dilangalen as candidate for representative of that province (docketed as SPA No. A07-0).
13
Respondent Dilangalen asserts, and petitioner does not dispute, that as of 2000,
Cotabato City had a population of 163,849, falling short of the minimum population
requirement in Section 5 (3), Article VI of the Constitution which provides: "Each legislative
district shall comprise, as far as practicable, contiguous, compact, and adjacent
territory. Each city with a population of at least two hundred fifty thousand, or each
province, shall have at least one representative." (Emphasis supplied)
14
124 Phil. 1226 (1966).
15
As provided in the Resolution of 16 October 2007.
16The Court also required Sema to submit with her Memorandum the certifications from the
Department of Finance, the Lands Management Bureau, the National Statistics Office, and
the Department of Interior and Local Government that at the time of the creation of Shariff
Kabunsuan on 28 August 2006 it met the requisites for the creation of a province under
Section 461 of RA 7160.
17
"SEC. 6. Authority to Create Local Government Units. - A local government unit may be
created, divided, merged, abolished, or its boundaries substantially altered either by law
enacted by Congress in the case of a province, city or municipality, or any other political
subdivision, or by ordinance passed by the sangguniang panlalawigan or sangguniang
panlungsod concerned in the case of a barangay located within its territorial jurisdiction,
subject to such limitations and requirements prescribed in this Code."
18
"SECTION 10. No province, city, municipality, or barangay may be created, divided,
merged, abolished, or its boundary substantially altered, except in accordance with the
criteria established in the Local Government Code and subject to approval by a majority of
the votes cast in a plebiscite in the political units directly affected."
19
Rollo, p. 229.
20"SECTION 6. Local government units shall have a just share, as determined by law, in
the national taxes which shall be automatically released to them."
21
Section 1, Rule 65 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure.
22
Section 3, Rule 65 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure.
23
See, however, Macabago v. Commission on Elections (440 Phil. 683 [2002]) where the
Court held that a petition for certiorari under Rule 65 will lie to question the constitutionality
of an election regulation if the COMELEC has acted capriciously or whimsically, with grave
abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction.
24
Social Weather Stations, Inc. v. COMELEC, 409 Phil. 571 (2001); Mutuc v. Commission
on Elections, G.R. No. L-32717, 26 November 1970, 36 SCRA 228.
25
Sections 385 and 386, RA 7160.
26 Sections 441, 449 and 460, RA 7160.
27
Section 20, Article X, Constitution.
See Section 2, Article VIII of the 1973 Constitution and Section 5, Article VI of the 1935
28
Constitution.
29
312 Phil. 492, 501 (1995).
30
Section 48 of Republic Act No. 8507 (Charter of Parañaque City) provides:
Section 50. Legislative District. — As highly urbanized, the City of Pasig shall have
its own legislative district with the first representative to be elected in the next
national elections after the passage of this Act. (Emphasis supplied)
Section 58. Representative District. — The City of San Jose del Monte shall have its
own representative district to commence in the next national election after the
effectivity of this Act. (Emphasis supplied)
The term "regular local election" must be confined to the regular election of elective
local officials, as distinguished from the regular election of national officials. The
elective national officials are the President, Vice-President, Senators and
Congressmen. The elective local officials are Provincial Governors, Vice-Governors
of provinces, Mayors and Vice-Mayors of cities and municipalities, Members of the
Sanggunians of provinces, cities and municipalities, punong barangays and
members of the sangguniang barangays, and the elective regional officials of the
Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao. These are the only local elective officials
deemed recognized by Section 2(2) of Article IX-C of the Constitution, which
provides:
SEC. 2. The Commission on Elections shall exercise the following powers and
functions:
xxxx
(2) Exercise exclusive original jurisdiction over all contests relating to the elections,
returns, and qualifications of all elective regional, provincial, and city officials, and
appellate jurisdiction over all contests involving elective municipal officials decided
by trial courts of general jurisdiction, or involving elective barangay officials decided
by trial courts of limited jurisdiction. (Emphasis supplied)
32
Supra note 13 at 1235-1236.
33 See note 3.
34
Section 461 provides: "Requisites for Creation. — (a) A province may be created if it has
an average annual income, as certified by the Department of Finance, of not less than
Twenty million pesos (₱20,000,000.00) based on 1991 constant prices and either of the
following requisites:
(ii) a population of not less than two hundred fifty thousand (250,000) inhabitants as
certified by the National Statistics Office: Provided, That, the creation thereof shall
not reduce the land area, population, and income of the original unit or units at the
time of said creation to less than the minimum requirements prescribed herein.
(b) The territory need not be contiguous if it comprise two (2) or more islands
or is separated by a chartered city or cities which do not contribute to the
income of the province.
(c) The average annual income shall include the income accruing to the
general fund, exclusive of special funds, trust funds, transfers and non-
recurring income."
35
Atty. Edgardo Carlos B. Vistan II, counsel for petitioner in G.R. No. 177597.
36
TSN (27 November 2007), pp. 64-69.
37Unlike the 1935 and the 1973 Constitutions, the 1987 Constitution mandates, in Section
15, Article X, the creation of autonomous regions in the Cordilleras and Muslim Mindanao
to foster political autonomy. See Cordillera Broad Coalition v. Commission on Audit, G.R.
No. 79956, 29 January 1990, 181 SCRA 495.
38
Website of House of Representatives as of 12 May 2008.
SEPARATE OPINION
(Dissenting and Concurring)
TINGA, J.:
I agree that the petitions should be denied, but on a wholly different basis from that offered by the
majority. I cannot accede to the majority’s conclusion, burnished by reasoning most strained, that
the Regional Assembly of the Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao (Regional Assembly)
should be deprived of the power delegated to it by Congress to create provinces. With this ruling,
the Court has dealt another severe blow to the cause of local autonomy.
Our Constitution, in reflection of the sovereign wisdom of the people, has prescribed local
government rule as a tool for national development and welfare. The majority is unfortunately
unmindful of these considerations. The Regional Assembly and the government of the
Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao exercised constituent functions in establishing the
province of Shariff Kabunsuan and providing for its local government. The majority did not bother
to hear their side in these petitions, which after all, never put in issue the constitutionality of the
creation of the province. The people of Shariff Kabunsuan, by sovereign desire and constitutional
design, ratified through a plebiscite the province named in honor of the revered figure who
introduced Islam to Central Mindanao. The majority has annihilated the province with nary a word
of comfort or concern for its citizens. Sadly, there will be no shelter for the Court from the impact
of this decision, which unduly stretches the Constitution to deny the will of the duly elected
members of the Regional Assembly, that of the constituents they represent, and most of all, that
of the people of Shariff Kabunsuan.
I.
We are dealing with two consolidated petitions which essentially raise the same arguments, but
were brought forth by two different parties laboring under different circumstances. The petitioner
in G.R. No. 177597, Bai Sandra S.A. Sema, a congressional candidate in the 2007 legislative
elections who posits that the newly-created province of Shariff Kabunsuan is entitled to its own
exclusive legislative district. The petitioner in G.R. No. 178628, Perfecto F. Marquez, suing in his
capacity as a taxpayer and a resident of Cotabato City,1 argues that with the creation of Shariff
Kabunsuan, his home city cannot be conjoined with Shariff Kabunsuan to create just one
legislative district for both territories.
As narrated by the majority,2 four (4) days prior to the 14 May 2007 elections, respondent
Commission on Elections (COMELEC) promulgated Resolution No. 7902, whereby it resolved to
maintain the composition of what had been the First District of Maguindanao, composed of
Cotabato City, a chartered city, and several other municipalities, even though these municipalities
formerly belonging to Maguindanao have since been constituted as part of the province of Shariff
Kabunsuan, which was created by the Regional Assembly by virtue of Muslim Mindanao
Autonomy Act No. 201 in August of 2006.
Both petitioners challenge the notion of fusing Cotabato City, which is not a part of ARMM, with
the ARMM municipalities which now constitute the new province of Shariff Kabunsuan, into one
legislative district. To resolve that question on the merits, it is inevitable that the Court examine
the validity of the creation of Shariff Kabunsuan in the first place, and the majority has fully
adopted that approach. However, there are significant impediments that weigh down both
petitioners, and supply the cogent reason for the more prudent approach which is to dismiss the
petitions outright.
It is clear that both petitioners rely on constitutional issues in support of their petitions as they
posit that under the Constitution Shariff Kabunsuan is entitled to its own separate legislative
district. It is cardinal that the Court’s power of judicial review may be exercised in constitutional
cases only if all the following requisites are complied
with, namely: (1) the existence of an actual and appropriate case or controversy; (2) a personal
and substantial interest of the party raising the constitutional question; (3) the exercise of judicial
review is pleaded at the earliest opportunity; and (4) the constitutional question is the lis mota of
the case.3
With respect to Sema, it is plainly evident, as argued by private respondent Rep. Didagen P.
Dilangalen, that she is estopped from bringing forth the present petition. On 29 March 2007, she
filed her Certificate of Candidacy before the COMELEC, declaring her candidacy a Member of the
House of Representatives representing "the Province of Shariff Kabunsuan w/ Cotabato
City."4 She recognized under oath that she was seeking election for a legislative district that
encompassed both Shariff Kabunsuan and Cotabato City, and she should be consequently
barred from disavowing the very district which she undertook to serve if elected. Sema appears to
have campaigned for election in this conjoined district, and was accordingly defeated by
Dilangalen, her votes from both Shariff Kabunsuan and Cotabato City included in the tally.
It would indeed be difficult to assess injury for purposes of locus standi on the part of Sema by
reason of the assailed COMELEC Resolution, which after all, reaffirms the very legislative district
whose seat in Congress she had sought to be elected to. Her standing to raise the present
petition is materially affected by her express consent and active campaign for election from the
legislative district which she now seeks to invalidate. A party challenging the constitutionality of a
law, act or statute must show "not only that the law is invalid, but also that he or she has
sustained or is in immediate, or imminent danger of sustaining some direct injury as a result of its
enforcement," that party has been or is about to be, denied some right or privilege to which he or
she is lawfully entitled.5 Sema’s prior avowal that she was running for the Shariff Kabunsuan with
Cotabato City legislative district, and her campaign for election to that district, belie the existence
of injury on her part caused by the COMELEC resolution that affirmed that very legislative district.
On the part of Marquez, he first raised his present claims through the petition in G.R. No. 179608,
which was filed with this Court in July 2007, or more than two months after the May 2007
elections. As a result, could no longer ask that the holding of the said elections in the conjoined
district be restrained, and instead seeks that new or special elections be conducted.
As earlier noted, among the requisites for the Court to be able to exercise judicial review in
constitutional cases is that the exercise of judicial review is pleaded at the earliest possible
opportunity.6 Clearly, his petition was not timely filed at the earliest possible opportunity, which
would have been at a point prior to the May 2007 elections. Worse, he filed his petition after the
voters in the affected districts had
already elected a candidate of their choosing, a sovereign act which he seeks to annul.
Considering the grave implications of the step he seeks, as well as the fact that such recourse
usually smacks of opportunism and bad faith, it is but proper for the Court to decline review
unless all the established requisites for judicial review for constitutional cases have indeed been
met. Marquez does not meet this Court’s exacting standards.
Moreover, Marquez does not have a valid cause of action before this Court. His prayer is to
compel the COMELEC to provide for new congressional elections for Cotabato City.The relief
sought does not lie simply because Rep. Dilangalen, by virtue of his electoral victory, lawfully
represents the City in addition to the Province of Shariff Kabunsuan. From another perspective,
the COMELEC does not have the requisite power to call elections, as the same is part of the
plenary legislative power. Only Congress, which was not impleaded as a party to Marquez’s
petition, has the power to set congressional elections only for Cotabato City, if ever. Even
assuming that Congress was impleaded, it would be improper for this Court to compel Congress
by judicial fiat to pass a law or resolution for the holding of such elections.
In sum, Marquez’s petition should be dismissed outright for having been filed out of time, for lack
of cause of action, and for not impleading a real party-in-interest.
II.
One might argue that it is imperative for the Court to resolve the substantive issues, since the
situation may emerge again. However, the exception in exercising judicial review if the case is
capable of repetition yet evading review applies only if the case is "moot and academic,"7 and not
when the petitioners lack the requisite standing, have no cause of action, and have failed to join a
proper party, which is the case here. In addition, it is entirely possible that between now and the
next elections, either Congress or the Regional Assembly would pass new legislation concerning
the composition or status of Shariff Kabunsuan, thereby changing the legal complexion and
factual milieu of the situation. If that occurs, the questions that will be facing the Court then should
a challenge be mounted may very well be different from those currently befacing us.
However, it is apparent that the ponente wishes to settle these cases on the merits. In doing so,
he frames two issues–whether Congress can delegate to the Regional Assembly the power to
create provinces; and whether the Regional Assembly has the power to create legislative
districts. However, with due respect, the majority’s discussion makes quite an easy leap when it
abruptly fuses these two issues. Worse, the majority fails to take into account certain fundamental
constitutional principles which have immense bearing in these cases. The resulting analysis is
incomplete and uninformed of the full constitutional milieu under which these petitions should be
resolved.
My own framework firstly considers two important principles which underlie the issues presented
before us–the rule on delegation of powers, and the constitutionally-ordained paradigms of local
government and local autonomy. Without the influence of these principles, any resulting analysis
of the two issues cast by the majority will be atomistic in nature.
III.
The laws we are presently impelled to interpret involve multiple instances of Congress delegating
power to the Regional Assembly. Explicity, Rep. Act No. 9054 delegates to the Regional
Assembly the power to create provinces and other local government units, though subject to
certain specified limitations. The majority likewise asserts that through that mechanism, Congress
has also delegated to the Regional Assembly the power to create legislative districts.
The Constitution expressly vests legislative power in the Congress of the Philippines, consisting
of a Senate and a House of Representatives.8 Traditionally, the delegation of Congress of its
legislative powers had been frowned upon. "A logical corollary to the doctrine of separation of
powers is the principle of non-delegation of powers, as expressed in the Latin maxim potestas
delegata non delegare potest (what has been delegated cannot be delegated). This is based on
the ethical principle that such delegated power constitutes not only a right but a duty to be
performed by the delegate through the instrumentality of his own judgment and not through the
intervening mind of another."9
However, the strict application of the non-delegation doctrine has, in recent times, been relaxed, if
not minimized altogether, particularly in the context of regulatory jurisdiction of administrative
agencies. In every industrialized nation, administrative agencies, which are generally part of the
executive branch, have been granted considerable lawmaking power.10 "Given the volume and
variety of interactions in today's society, it is doubtful if the legislature can promulgate laws that
will deal adequately with and respond promptly to the minutiae of everyday life. Hence, the need
to delegate to administrative bodies—the principal agencies tasked to execute laws in their
specialized fields—the authority to promulgate rules and regulations to implement a given statute
and effectuate its policies."11
In the context of delegation of legislative powers to local governments, a noted authority on the
subject has this to say:
The state legislative power – that is, the exercise of the policy-making judgment and discretion on
state matters that state constitutions vest and recognize in the legislature – cannot be delegated
to some other person or body but must rest with the legislature itself. Thus, the legislature cannot
delegate to a commission the power to determine the form of government, powers and functions
of proposed municipalities since these matters require legislative judgment. But the details of
organization of its own government can be left to a municipality, limited only by general state law;
and such basic state powers as the police power, taxing power, and power of eminent domain
can be, and almost always are, delegated to local governments for their use for local purposes.
The rule against delegation of state legislative authority is no barrier to the delegation of powers
of local self government to local units. x x x12
Notwithstanding the exceptions that have been carved to the rule of non-delegation, it bears
notice that while our Constitution broadly endows legislative powers to Congress it also
specifically conditions the emergence of certain rights, duties and obligations upon the enactment
of a law oriented towards such constitutional predicate. These include the prohibition of political
dynasties as may be defined by law,13 the reasonable conditions prescribed by law relating to full
public disclosure of all the State’s transactions involving public interest; 14 the manner by which
Philippine citizenship may be lost or reacquired;15 the date of regular elections for members of
Congress;16 the manner of conduct of special elections to fill in congressional vacancies; 17 the
authorization of the President to exercise emergency powers;18 the system for initiative and
referendum;19 the salaries of the President and Vice-President;20 the creation and allocation of
jurisdiction of lower courts21 ; and on many other matters of grave import.
May these specified functions be delegated by Congress to another body? These specific
functions are non-delegable, for they are textually committed by the Constitution to Congress.
Perhaps it is possible to segregate these particular functions to those which would, even absent
constitutional definition, anyway fall within the plenary legislative power, and those which are not
plenary in nature but were especially designated to Congress by the Constitution. Still, in either
case, only Congress, and no other body, can carry out that function. As to those powers which
would normally fall within the plenary legislative power, the Constitution has decided to doubly
emphasize that it is the Congress which is so empowered to perform such tasks. With respect to
the non-plenary functions assigned to Congress, it is clear that the assignment implies the
delegation by the Constitution to Congress of specific, wholly original functions.
There shall be further discussion on this point in relation to the questions currently presented.
Before we get there, I wish to emphasize a second constitutional principle, local governance and
autonomy, that should likewise bear on our deliberations.
IV.
The 1987 Constitution ushered in a new era in local government rule for all citizens, and local
autonomy rule for Muslim Mindanao and the Cordillera region. This new paradigm is crystallized
under Article X of the Constitution.
Section 2, Article X guarantees that the territorial and political subdivisions in the Philippines shall
enjoy local autonomy. The guarantee of local autonomy is actualized through a local government
code that delineates the structure and powers of local governments, and through constitutional
measures that entitle local government units to generate their own revenue stream and assure
the same to their fair share in the national internal revenue.22Local government rule, in
constitutional contemplation, is a live being that exists to counterbalance the rule of the national
government, and is not a mere palliative established in the Constitution to soothe the people with
the illusion of having a more direct say in their governance.
By constitutional design, local government rule for the people of Muslim Mindanao and the
Cordilleras is even more enhanced, as they are assured of their own autonomous regions.
Section 15, Article X of the Constitution mandated that "[t]he shall be created autonomous
regions in Muslim Mindanao and in the Cordilleras consisting of provinces, cities, municipalities,
and geographical areas sharing common and distinctive historical and cultural heritage, economic
and social structures, and other relevant characteristics…" Following the Constitution, Congress
in 1989 passed Republic Act No. 6734, "An Act Providing for An Organic Act for the Autonomous
Region in Muslim Mindanao", leading to the creation of the ARMM. In 2001, Congress further
strengthened the Organic Act with the passage of Rep. Act No. 9054, which among others,
empowered the Assembly to create provinces. The Organic Acts possess a special status within
Philippine laws. While they are classified as statutes, the Organic Acts are more than ordinary
statutes because they enjoy affirmation by a plebiscite, and thus could not be amended by
ordinary statutes without any plebiscite.23
In Disomangcop v. Datumanong,24 the Court explained at length the vital constitutional purposes
of local autonomy:
xxx According to Commissioner Jose Nolledo, Chairman of the Committee which drafted the
provisions, it "is an indictment against the status quo of a unitary system that, to my mind, has
ineluctably tied the hands of progress in our country . . . our varying regional characteristics are
factors to capitalize on to attain national strength through decentralization."
The idea behind the Constitutional provisions for autonomous regions is to allow the separate
development of peoples with distinctive cultures and traditions. These cultures, as a matter of
right, must be allowed to flourish.
xxx
Several commissioners echoed the pervasive sentiment in the plenary sessions in their own
inimitable way. Thus, Commissioner Bias Ople referred to the recognition that the Muslim
Mindanao and the Cordilleras "do not belong to the dominant national community" as the
justification for conferring on them a "measure of legal self-sufficiency, meaning self-government,
so that they will flourish politically, economically and culturally," with the hope that after achieving
parity with the rest of the country they would "give up their own autonomous region in favor of
joining the national mainstream." For his part, the Muslim delegate, Commissioner Ahmad Alonto,
spoke of the diversity of cultures as the framework for nation-building. Finally, excerpts of the
poignant plea of Commissioner Ponciano Bennagen deserve to be quoted verbatim:
. . . They see regional autonomy as the answer to their centuries of struggle against oppression
and exploitation. For so long, their names and identities have been debased. Their ancestral
lands have been ransacked for their treasures, for their wealth. Their cultures have been defiled,
their very lives threatened, and worse, extinguished, all in the name of national development; all
in the name of public interest; all in the name of common good; all in the name of the right to
property; all in the name of Regalian Doctrine; all in the name of national security. These phrases
have meant nothing to our indigenous communities, except for the violation of their human rights.
Honorable Commissioners, we wish to impress upon you the gravity of the decision to be made
by every single one of us in this Commission. We have the overwhelming support of the Bangsa
Moro and the Cordillera Constitution. By this we mean meaningful and authentic regional
autonomy. We propose that we have a separate Article on the autonomous regions for the
Bangsa Moro and Cordillera people clearly spelled out in this Constitution, instead of prolonging
the agony of their vigil and their struggle. This, too is a plea for national peace. Let us not pass
the buck to the Congress to decide on this. Let us not wash our hands of our responsibility to
attain national unity and peace and to settle this problem and rectify past injustices, once and for
all.
The need for regional autonomy is more pressing in the case of the Filipino Muslims and the
Cordillera people who have been fighting for it. Their political struggle highlights their unique
cultures and the unresponsiveness of the unitary system to their aspirations. The Moros' struggle
for self-determination dates as far back as the Spanish conquest in the Philippines. Even at
present, the struggle goes on.
Perforce, regional autonomy is also a means towards solving existing serious peace and order
problems and secessionist movements. Parenthetically, autonomy, decentralization and
regionalization, in international law, have become politically acceptable answers to intractable
problems of nationalism, separatism, ethnic conflict and threat of secession. 25
Petitioner Sema points out that among the terms in the Final Peace Agreement between the
Philippine Government and the Moro National Liberation Front was that amendments be
introduced to the original Organic Act, including one which authorized the Assembly to "create,
divide, merge, abolish or substantially alter boundaries of local government units in the area of
autonomy in accordance with the criteria laid down by law subject to approval by a majority of the
votes cast in a plebiscite called for the purpose in the political units affected."26 Indeed, it could
hardly be argued that the challenged power of the Assembly was animated by nakedly selfish
political purposes. It was, in fact, among the terms negotiated with care by the Philippine
Government with the leading armed insurgency group in Muslim Mindanao towards the higher
purpose of providing a permanent peace agreement in the strife-torn region. It does come with a
measure of surprise and disappointment that the Solicitor General has reached a position that
rejects the Final Peace Agreement negotiated by the Government and the MNLF.
Disomangcop further crystallizes the interplay between regional autonomy and national
sovereignty, to the extent that the former is accommodated under the latter.
Regional autonomy is the degree of self-determination exercised by the local government unit vis-
à-vis the central government.
In international law, the right to self-determination need not be understood as a right to political
separation, but rather as a complex net of legal-political relations between a certain people and
the state authorities. It ensures the right of peoples to the necessary level of autonomy that would
guarantee the support of their own cultural identity, the establishment of priorities by the
community's internal decision-making processes and the management of collective matters by
themselves.
If self-determination is viewed as an end in itself reflecting a preference for homogeneous,
independent nation-states, it is incapable of universal application without massive disruption.
However, if self-determination is viewed as a means to an end — that end being a democratic,
participatory political and economic system in which the rights of individuals and the identity of
minority communities are protected — its continuing validity is more easily perceived.
Regional autonomy refers to the granting of basic internal government powers to the people of a
particular area or region with least control and supervision from the central government.
The objective of the autonomy system is to permit determined groups, with a common tradition
and shared social-cultural characteristics, to develop freely their ways of life and heritage,
exercise their rights, and be in charge of their own business. This is achieved through the
establishment of a special governance regime for certain member communities who choose their
own authorities from within the community and exercise the jurisdictional authority legally
accorded to them to decide internal community affairs.
In the Philippine setting, regional autonomy implies the cultivation of more positive means for
national integration. It would remove the wariness among the Muslims, increase their trust in the
government and pave the way for the unhampered implementation of the development programs
in the region. Again, even a glimpse of the deliberations of the Constitutional Commission could
lend a sense of the urgency and the inexorable appeal of true decentralization:
MR. OPLE. . . . We are writing a Constitution, of course, for generations to come, not only for the
present but for our posterity. There is no harm in recognizing certain vital pragmatic needs for
national peace and solidarity, and the writing of this Constitution just happens at a time when it is
possible for this Commission to help the cause of peace and reconciliation in Mindanao and the
Cordilleras, by taking advantage of a heaven-sent opportunity. . . .
MR. ABUBAKAR. . . . So in order to foreclose and convince the rest of the of the Philippines that
Mindanao autonomy will be granted to them as soon as possible, more or less, to dissuade these
armed men from going outside while Mindanao will be under the control of the national
government, let us establish an autonomous Mindanao within our effort and capacity to do so
within the shortest possible time. This will be an answer to the Misuari clamor, not only for
autonomy but for independence.
MR. OPLE. . . . The reason for this abbreviation of the period for the consideration of the
Congress of the organic acts and their passage is that we live in abnormal times. In the case of
Muslim Mindanao and the Cordilleras, we know that we deal with questions of war and peace.
These are momentous issues in which the territorial integrity and the solidarity of this country are
being put at stake, in a manner of speaking.
We are writing a peace Constitution. We hope that the Article on Social Justice can contribute to
a climate of peace so that any civil strife in the countryside can be more quickly and more justly
resolved. We are providing for autonomous regions so that we give constitutional permanence to
the just demands and grievances of our own fellow countrymen in the Cordilleras and in
Mindanao. One hundred thousand lives were lost in that struggle in Mindanao, and to this day,
the Cordilleras is being shaken by an armed struggle as well as a peaceful and militant struggle.
Rather than give opportunity to foreign bodies, no matter how sympathetic to the Philippines, to
contribute to the settlement of this issue, I think the Constitutional Commission ought not to
forego the opportunity to put the stamp of this Commission through definitive action on the
settlement of the problems that have nagged us and our forefathers for so long. 27
A necessary prerequisite of autonomy is decentralization, which typically involves delegated
power wherein a larger government chooses to delegate certain authority to more local
governments.28 Decentralization of power involves an abdication of political power in the favor of
local government units declared to be autonomous, which are free to chart their own destiny and
shape their future with minimum intervention from central authorities.29 What the Constitution
contemplated with respect to the ARMM was political autonomy. As explained by Justice Cortes
for the Court:
It must be clarified that the constitutional guarantee of local autonomy in the Constitution [Art. X,
sec. 2] refers to the administrative autonomy of local government units or, cast in more technical
language, the decentralization of government authority [Villegas v. Subido, G.R. No. L-31004,
January 8, 1971, 37 SCRA 1]. Local autonomy is not unique to the 1987 Constitution, it being
guaranteed also under the 1973 Constitution [Art. II, sec. 10]. And while there was no express
guarantee under the 1935 Constitution, the Congress enacted the Local Autonomy Act (R.A. No.
2264) and the Decentralization Act (R.A. No. 5185), which ushered the irreversible march
towards further enlargement of local autonomy in the country [Villegas v. Subido, supra.]
On the other hand, the creation of autonomous regions in Muslim Mindanao and the Cordilleras,
which is peculiar to the 1987 Constitution, contemplates the grant of political autonomy and not
just administrative autonomy to these regions. Thus, the provision in the Constitution for an
autonomous regional government with a basic structure consisting of an executive department
and a legislative assembly and special courts with personal, family and property law jurisdiction in
each of the autonomous regions [Art. X, sec. 18].30
Disomangcop further elaborates on the import of political autonomy as it relates to the ARMM:
[B]y regional autonomy, the framers intended it to mean "meaningful and authentic regional
autonomy." As articulated by a Muslim author, substantial and meaningful autonomy is "the kind
of local self-government which allows the people of the region or area the power to determine
what is best for their growth and development without undue interference or dictation from the
central government."
To this end, Section 16, Article X limits the power of the President over autonomous regions. In
essence, the provision also curtails the power of Congress over autonomous regions.
Consequently, Congress will have to re-examine national laws and make sure that they reflect the
Constitution's adherence to local autonomy. And in case of conflicts, the underlying spirit which
should guide its resolution is the Constitution's desire for genuine local autonomy.
The diminution of Congress' powers over autonomous regions was confirmed in Ganzon v. Court
of Appeals[31],wherein this Court held that "the omission (of "as may be provided by law") signifies
nothing more than to underscore local governments' autonomy from Congress and to break
Congress' 'control' over local government affairs."32
Unfortunately, the majority gives short shrift to the considerations of local autonomy, even as
such paradigm partakes of a constitutional mandate. If anything, these provisions should
dissuade against a reflexive dismissal of the provisions of the Organic Acts. It should be
emphasized that local autonomy cannot be in denigration of the Constitution. It is repeatedly
emphasized within Article X that the grant of local autonomy and the subsequent exercise of
powers by the autonomous government must remain within the confines of the Constitution. At
the same time, if there is no constitutional bar against the exercise of the powers of government
by the autonomous government in Muslim Mindanao, particularly by the Regional Assembly, then
there is no basis to thwart the constitutional design by denying such powers to that body.
Having laid down the essential constitutional predicates, I shall proceed to dwell on the core
issues raised. May Congress delegate to the Regional Assembly the power to create provinces?
Assuming that such delegation is not barred by the Constitution, may the exercise of such power
by the Regional Assembly give rise to separate legislative districts for such provinces thus
created?
V.
There should be little debate on the origins of the power to create provinces, which had existed
as a political unit in the Philippines since the Spanish colonial period, and which all our
Constitutions have recognized as a basic level of local governments. Ever since the emergence
of our tripartite system of democratic government, the power to create provinces have always
been legislative in character. They are created by the people through their representatives in
Congress, subject to direct affirmation by the very people who stand to become the constituents
of the new putative province.
May such power be delegated by Congress to a local legislative body such as the Regional
Assembly? Certainly, nothing in the Constitution bars Congress from doing so. In fact,
considering the constitutional mandate of local autonomy for Muslim Mindanao, it can be said that
such delegation is in furtherance of the constitutional design.
The only constitutional provision that concerns with the creation of provinces is Section 10, Article
X, which reads:
Section 10. No province, city, municipality or barangay may be created, divided, merged,
abolished, or its boundary substantially altered, except in accordance with the criteria established
in the local government code and subject to approval by a majority of the votes cast in a
plebiscite in the political units directly affected.
Nothing in this provision specifically limits the power to create provinces, cities, municipalities or
barangays to Congress alone. The provision does embody a significant limitation – that the
creation of these political subdivisions must be in accordance with the criteria established in the
local government code, a law which is enacted by Congress. It would thus be proper to say that
the Constitution limits the ability to set forth the standards for the creation of a province
exclusively to Congress. But to say that the Constitution confines to Congress alone the power to
establish the criteria for creating provinces is vastly different from saying that the Constitution
confines to Congress alone the power to create provinces. There is nothing in the Constitution
that supports the latter proposition.
Section 10, Article X does not specifically designate Congress as the body with the power to
create provinces. As earlier stated, the power to create these political subdivisions is part of the
plenary legislative power, hence such power can be exercised by Congress even without need of
specific constitutional assignation. At the same time, the absence of constitutional language
committing Congress with the function of creating political subdivisions ultimately denotes that
such legislative function may be delegated by Congress.
In fact, the majority actually concedes that Congress, under its plenary legislative powers, "can
delegate to local legislative bodies the power to create local government units, subject to
reasonable standards and provided no conflict arises with any provision of the Constitution." 33 As
is pointed out, such delegation is operationalized by the LGC itself, which confers to provincial
boards and city and municipal councils, the general power to create barangays within their
respective jurisdictions. The Constitution does not confine the exercise of such powers only to the
national legislature, and indeed if that were the case, the power to create barangays as granted
by the LGC to local legislative bodies would be unconstitutional
Traditionally, it has been the national legislature which has exercised the power to create
provinces. However, the 1987 Constitution ushered in a new era in devolved local government
rule, and particularly, a regime of local autonomy for Muslim Mindanao and the Cordilleras. We
recognized in Disomangcop v. Datumanong, thus:
Autonomy, as a national policy, recognizes the wholeness of the Philippine society in its
ethnolinguistic, cultural, and even religious diversities. It strives to free Philippine society of the
strain and wastage caused by the assimilationist approach. Policies emanating from the
legislature are invariably assimilationist in character despite channels being open for minority
representation. As a result, democracy becomes an irony to the minority group. 34
It bears reemphasizing that the Constitution also actualizes a preference for local government
rule, and thusly provides:
The Congress shall enact a local government code which shall provide for a more responsive and
accountable local government structure instituted through a system of decentralization with
effective mechanisms of recall, initiative, and referendum, allocate among the different local
government units their powers, responsibilities, and resources, and provide for the qualifications,
election, appointment and removal, term, salaries, powers and functions and duties of local
officials, and all other matters relating to the organization and operation of the local units. 35
Attuned with enhanced local government rule, Congress had, through Rep. Act No. 9054, taken
the bold step of delegating to a local legislative assembly the power to create provinces, albeit
prudently withholding any ability to create legislative districts as well. Section 19 of Rep. Act No.
9054 reads:
Section 19. Creation, Division or Abolition of Provinces, Cities, Municipalities or Barangay. The
Regional Assembly may create, divide, merge, abolish, or substantially alter boundaries of
provinces, cities, municipalities, or barangays in accordance with the criteria laid down by the
Republic Act No. 7160, the Local Government Code of 1991, subject to the approval by the
majority of the votes cast in the plebiscite in the political units directly affected. The Regional
Assembly may prescribe standards lower than those mandated by Republic Act No. 7160, the
Local Government Code of 1991, in the creation, division, merger, abolition, or alteration of the
boundaries of provinces, cities, municipalities, or barangay. Provinces, cities, municipalities, or
barangays created, divided, merged, or whose boundaries are altered without observing the
standards prescribed by Republic Act No. 7160, the Local Government Code of 1991, shall not
be entitled to any share of the taxes that are allotted to the local governments units under the
provisions of the code.
The financial requirements of the provinces, cities and municipalities, or barangays so created,
divided, merged shall be provided by the Regional Assembly out of the general funds of the
Regional Government.
The holding of a plebiscite to determine the will of the majority of the voters of the areas affected
by the creation, division, merger, or whose boundaries are being altered as required by Republic
Act No. 7160, the Local Government Code of 1991, shall, however, be observed.
Because this empowerment scheme is in line with a policy preferred by the Constitution, it
becomes utterly necessary to pinpoint a specific constitutional prohibition that bars Congress
from authorizing the Regional Assembly to create provinces. No such constitutional limitation
exists, and it is not the province, duty or sensible recourse of this Court to nullify an act of
Government in furtherance of a constitutional mandate and directly ratified by the affected people
if nothing in the Constitution proscribes such act.
The constitutionality of the delegated power of the Regional Assembly to create provinces is
further affirmed by the provisions in the Constitution concerning the mandatory creation of
autonomous regions in Muslim Mindanao, as found in Sections 15 to 21, Article X. The organic
act enacted by Congress for the autonomous region is to define the basic structure of
government.36 Section 20 specifically allows the organic act of autonomous regions to provide for
legislative powers over, among others, administrative organization; creation of sources of
revenues; economic, social and tourism development; and such other matters as may be
authorized by law for the promotion of the general welfare of the people of the region. The
creation of provinces within the autonomous region precisely assists these constitutional aims
under Section 20, enhancing as it does the basic administration of government, the delivery of
government services, and the promotion of the local economy.
In addition, Section 17, Article X states that "[a]ll powers, functions, and responsibilities not
granted by this Constitution or by law to the autonomous regions shall be vested in the National
Government". The original Organic Act for Muslim Mindanao did not grant to the regional
government the power to create provinces, thus at that point, such power was properly exercised
by the National Government. But the subsequent passage of Rep. Act No. 9054 granted to the
Regional Assembly the power, function and responsibility to create provinces and other local
government units which had been exercised by the National Government.
The majority does not point to any specific constitutional prohibition barring Congress from
delegating to the Regional Assembly the power to create provinces. It does cite though that
Article 460 of the LGC provides that only by an Act of Congress may a province be created,
divided, merged, abolished or its boundary substantially altered. However, Republic Act No.
9054, which was passed ten (10) years after the LGC, unequivocally granted to the ARMM
Regional Assembly the power to create provinces, cities, municipalities and barangays within the
ARMM.
Any argument that the LGC confines to Congress the creation of provinces is muted by the fact
that ten years after the LGC was enacted by Congress, the same legislative body conferred on
the Assembly that same power within its territorial jurisdiction, thus amending the LGC to the
extent of accommodating these newly-granted powers to the Assembly.
There actually is an obvious unconstitutional dimension to Section 19, albeit one which is not in
point in this case. The provision states in part "[t]hat Regional Assembly may prescribe standards
lower than those mandated by Republic Act No. 7160, the Local Government Code of 1991, in
the creation, division, merger, abolition, or alteration of the boundaries of provinces, cities,
municipalities, or barangays." That proviso is squarely inconsistent with Section 10, Article X,
which accords to the LGC the sole criteria for the creation, division, merger, abolition or alteration
of boundaries of local government units. Said proviso thus cannot receive recognition from this
Court.
It bears noting that there is no contention presented thus far that the creation of Shariff
Kabunsuan was not in accordance with the criteria established in the LGC, thus this aspect of
unconstitutionality of Rep. Act No. 9054 may not be material to the petitions at bar.
VI.
The majority unfortunately asserts that Congress may not delegate to the Regional Assembly the
power to create provinces, despite the absence of any constitutional bar in that respect. The
reasons offered for such conclusion are actually the same reasons it submits why the Regional
Assembly could not create legislative districts, as if the power to create provinces and the power
to create legislative districts were one and the same. In contrast, I propose to pinpoint a specific
constitutional provision that prohibits the Regional Assembly from creating, directly or indirectly,
any legislative district without affecting that body’s delegated authority to create provinces.
Let us review this issue as presented before us. Notably, Republic Act No. 9054 does not
empower the Regional Assembly to create legislative districts, and MMA Act No. 201, which
created Shariff Kabunsuan, specifically disavows the creation of a new district for that province
and maintains the old legislative district shared with Cotabato City. It is the thesis though of the
petitioners that following Felwa v. Salas,37 the creation of the new province ipso facto established
as well an exclusive legislative district for Shariff Kabunsuan, "by operation of the Constitution."
How exactly does a legislative district come into being? In theory, Congress does not have any
express or plenary legislative power to create legislative districts, except by reapportionment.
Under the Constitution, such reapportionment occurs within three years following the return of the
census,38 but this Court has likewise recognized that reapportionment can also be made through
a special law, such as in the charter of a new city.39Still, even in exercising this limited power
through the constitutionally mandated reapportionment, Congress cannot substitute its own
discretion for the standards set forth in Section 5, Article VI. And should general reapportionment
made by Congress violate the parameters set forth by the Constitution, such act may be
invalidated by the Court, as it did in Macias v. COMELEC.40
As to the contention that the assailed law violates the present limit on the number of
representatives as set forth in the Constitution, a reading of the applicable provision, Article VI,
Section 5 (1), as aforequoted, shows that the present limit of 250 members is not absolute. The
Constitution clearly provides that the House of Representatives shall be composed of not more
than 250 members, "unless otherwise provided by law." The inescapable import of the latter
clause is that the present composition of Congress may be increased, if Congress itself so
mandates through a legislative enactment. Therefore, the increase in congressional
representation mandated by R.A. No. 7675 is not unconstitutional.42
These issues have been laid to rest in the recent case of Tobias v. Abalos. In said case, we ruled
that reapportionment of legislative districts may be made through a special law, such as in the
charter of a new city. The Constitution clearly provides that Congress shall be composed of not
more than two hundred fifty (250) members, unless otherwise fixed by law. As thus worded, the
Constitution did not preclude Congress from increasing its membership by passing a law, other
than a general reapportionment law. This is exactly what was done by Congress in enacting R.A.
No. 7854 and providing for an increase in Makati's legislative district.44
From these cases, it is evident that a law creating the province of Shariff Kabunsuan may likewise
serve the purpose of increasing the composition of the House of Representatives. In addition,
Congress generally has the power to delegate the power of creating local government units to the
appropriate local legislative assemblies. The critical question now is thus whether Congress may
delegate to local legislative assemblies the power to increase the composition of the House of
Representatives? The answer is no.
I have already pointed out that when the Constitution specifically designates a particular function
to Congress, only Congress may exercise such function, as the same is non-delegable. The
power to increase the composition of the House of Representatives is restricted by the
Constitution to a law passed by Congress, which may not delegate such law-making power to the
Regional Assembly. If we were to rule that Congress may delegate the power to increase the
composition of the House of Representatives, there would be no impediment for us to similarly
rule that those other specific functions tasked by the Constitution to Congress may be delegated
as well. To repeat, these include gravely important functions as the enactment of a law defining
political dynasties; the enactment of reasonable conditions relating to full public disclosure of all
the State’s transactions involving public interest; the manner by which Philippine citizenship may
be lost or reacquired; the date of regular elections for members of Congress; the provision for the
manner of conduct of special elections to fill in congressional vacancies; the authorization of the
President to exercise emergency powers; the prescription of a system for initiative and
referendum; the salaries of the President and Vice-President; and the creation and allocation of
jurisdiction of lower courts.
Considering that all these matters, including the composition of the House of Representatives,
are of national interest, it is but constitutionally proper that only a national legislature has the
competence to exercise these powers. And the Constitution does textually commit to Congress
alone the power to increase the membership of the House of Representatives.
Accordingly, the petitioners’ position cannot be sustained, as Shariff Kabunsuan cannot acquire
its own legislative district unless Congress itself accedes to the passage of a law that establishes
the same. The contrary position is in denigration of the Constitution, which limits to Congress
alone the non-delegable power to fix or increase the composition of the House of
Representatives. For that, I concur with the result of the majority.
Felwa cannot apply to these petitions. Its pronouncement that the creation of a province
automatically leads to the creation of a legislative district "by operation of the Constitution" can
only apply when the province is created by Congress itself, since there is no other constitutional
impediment to the emergence of the legislative district. However, in cases where it is a body other
than Congress which has created, although validly, the legislative district, the Constitution itself
bars the emergence of an accompanying legislative district, as this will result in an increase in the
composition of the House of Representatives which can only be accomplished through a law
passed by Congress.
VII.
Even as Section 19 of Rep. Act No. 9054 constitutionally authorizes the Regional Assembly to
create provinces, there are legal limitations that constrict the discretion of that body to exercise
such power. I had earlier identified as unconstitutional the discretion of the Regional Assembly to
create local government units based on a lower standard than that prescribed under the LGC.
Another clear limitation is that the creation of provinces cannot be authorized without the
ratification through a plebiscite by the people affected by such act, a requirement imposed by the
Organic Act itself and by Section 10, Article X of the Constitution.
The majority itself had raised an alarmist tone that allowing the Assembly to create provinces
would not lead to the unholy spectacle of whimsical provinces intended as personal fiefdoms and
created irrespective of size, shape and sense. In fact, allowing the Regional Assembly to create
provinces will not lead to hundreds or thousands, or even tens or dozens of new provinces. Any
new province will have to meet the same criteria set forth by the LGC for the creation of
provinces.
putative province, following Section 461 of the LGC, must possess the following requisites: (a) an
average annual income, as certified by the Department of Finance, of not less than
Php20,000,000.00, such income including the income accruing to the general fund, exclusive of
special funds, trust funds, transfers, and non-recurring income; (b) a contiguous territory of at
least two thousand (2,000) square kilometers, as certified by the Lands Management Bureau
(excepting when comprised of two (2) or more islands or when separated by a chartered city or
cities which do not contribute to the income of the province), or a population of not less than
250,000 inhabitants as certified by the National Statistics Office; (c) that the creation of the
province shall not reduce the land area, population, and income of the original unit or units at the
time of said creation to less than the minimum requirements prescribed under the Code. These
standards, which should bear upon the Assembly, would preclude the emergence of dozens,
hundreds or thousands of provinces within the relatively confined spaces of the present
Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao.
IX.
The concerns raised by the majority on how allowing the Assembly to create provinces would
affect the composition of the national Congress are valid issues, yet the approach it adopts is to
treat autonomy as invisible and inconsequential, instead of the countervailing constitutional
principle that it actually is. It is an approach that will exacerbate political and regional tensions
within Mindanao, especially since it shuns the terms of the negotiated peace. This decision today,
sad to say, is a decisive step backwards from the previous rulings of this Court that have been
supportive of the aims of regional autonomy.
DANTE O. TINGA
Associate Justice