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G.R. No.

157013 July 10, 2003

ATTY. ROMULO B. MACALINTAL, petitioner,


vs.
COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS, HON. ALBERTO ROMULO, in his
official capacity as Executive Secretary, and HON. EMILIA T.
BONCODIN, Secretary of the Department of Budget and Management,
respondents.

AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ, J.:

Before the Court is a petition for certiorari and prohibition filed by Romulo
B. Macalintal, a member of the Philippine Bar, seeking a declaration that
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 9189 (The Overseas Absentee
Voting Act of 2003)1 suffer from constitutional infirmity. Claiming that he has
actual and material legal interest in the subject matter of this case in seeing
to it that public funds are properly and lawfully used and appropriated,
petitioner filed the instant petition as a taxpayer and as a lawyer.

The Court upholds the right of petitioner to file the present petition.

R.A. No. 9189, entitled, "An Act Providing for A System of Overseas
Absentee Voting by Qualified Citizens of the Philippines Abroad,
Appropriating Funds Therefor, and for Other Purposes," appropriates funds
under Section 29 thereof which provides that a supplemental budget on the
General Appropriations Act of the year of its enactment into law shall
provide for the necessary amount to carry out its provisions. Taxpayers,
such as herein petitioner, have the right to restrain officials from wasting
public funds through the enforcement of an unconstitutional statute.2 The
Court has held that they may assail the validity of a law appropriating public
funds3 because expenditure of public funds by an officer of the State for the
purpose of executing an unconstitutional act constitutes a misapplication of
such funds.4

The challenged provision of law involves a public right that affects a great
number of citizens. The Court has adopted the policy of taking jurisdiction
over cases whenever the petitioner has seriously and convincingly
presented an issue of transcendental significance to the Filipino people.
This has been explicitly pronounced in Kapatiran ng mga Naglilingkod sa
Pamahalaan ng Pilipinas, Inc. vs. Tan,5 where the Court held:
Objections to taxpayers’ suit for lack of sufficient personality standing, or
interest are, however, in the main procedural matters. Considering the
importance to the public of the cases at bar, and in keeping with the Court’s
duty, under the 1987 Constitution, to determine whether or not the other
branches of government have kept themselves within the limits of the
Constitution and the laws and that they have not abused the discretion
given to them, the Court has brushed aside technicalities of procedure and
has taken cognizance of these petitions.6

Indeed, in this case, the Court may set aside procedural rules as the
constitutional right of suffrage of a considerable number of Filipinos is
involved.

The question of propriety of the instant petition which may appear to be


visited by the vice of prematurity as there are no ongoing proceedings in
any tribunal, board or before a government official exercising judicial,
quasi-judicial or ministerial functions as required by Rule 65 of the Rules of
Court, dims in light of the importance of the constitutional issues raised by
the petitioner. In Tañada vs. Angara,7 the Court held:

In seeking to nullify an act of the Philippine Senate on the ground that it


contravenes the Constitution, the petition no doubt raises a justiciable
controversy. Where an action of the legislative branch is seriously alleged
to have infringed the Constitution, it becomes not only the right but in fact
the duty of the judiciary to settle the dispute. "The question thus posed is
judicial rather than political. The duty (to adjudicate) remains to assure that
the supremacy of the Constitution is upheld." Once a "controversy as to the
application or interpretation of constitutional provision is raised before this
Court (as in the instant case), it becomes a legal issue which the Court is
bound by constitutional mandate to decide."

In another case of paramount impact to the Filipino people, it has been


expressed that it is illogical to await the adverse consequences of the law
in order to consider the controversy actual and ripe for judicial resolution.8
In yet another case, the Court said that:

. . . despite the inhibitions pressing upon the Court when confronted with
constitutional issues, it will not hesitate to declare a law or act invalid when
it is convinced that this must be done. In arriving at this conclusion, its only
criterion will be the Constitution and God as its conscience gives it in the
light to probe its meaning and discover its purpose. Personal motives and
political considerations are irrelevancies that cannot influence its decisions.
Blandishment is as ineffectual as intimidation, for all the awesome power of
the Congress and Executive, the Court will not hesitate "to make the
hammer fall heavily," where the acts of these departments, or of any
official, betray the people’s will as expressed in the Constitution . . .9

The need to consider the constitutional issues raised before the Court is
further buttressed by the fact that it is now more than fifteen years since the
ratification of the 1987 Constitution requiring Congress to provide a system
for absentee voting by qualified Filipinos abroad. Thus, strong reasons of
public policy demand that the Court resolves the instant petition10 and
determine whether Congress has acted within the limits of the Constitution
or if it had gravely abused the discretion entrusted to it.11

The petitioner raises three principal questions:

A. Does Section 5(d) of Rep. Act No. 9189 allowing the registration of
voters who are immigrants or permanent residents in other countries by
their mere act of executing an affidavit expressing their intention to return to
the Philippines, violate the residency requirement in Section 1 of Article V
of the Constitution?

B. Does Section 18.5 of the same law empowering the COMELEC to


proclaim the winning candidates for national offices and party list
representatives including the President and the Vice-President violate the
constitutional mandate under Section 4, Article VII of the Constitution that
the winning candidates for President and the Vice-President shall be
proclaimed as winners by Congress?

C. May Congress, through the Joint Congressional Oversight Committee


created in Section 25 of Rep. Act No. 9189, exercise the power to review,
revise, amend, and approve the Implementing Rules and Regulations that
the Commission on Elections shall promulgate without violating the
independence of the COMELEC under Section 1, Article IX-A of the
Constitution?

The Court will resolve the questions in seriatim.

A. Does Section 5(d) of Rep. Act No. 9189 violate Section 1, Article V
of the 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines?
Section 5(d) provides:

Sec. 5. Disqualifications. – The following shall be disqualified from voting


under this Act:

.........

d) An immigrant or a permanent resident who is recognized as such in the


host country, unless he/she executes, upon registration, an affidavit
prepared for the purpose by the Commission declaring that he/she shall
resume actual physical permanent residence in the Philippines not later
than three (3) years from approval of his/her registration under this Act.
Such affidavit shall also state that he/she has not applied for citizenship in
another country. Failure to return shall be cause for the removal of the
name of the immigrant or permanent resident from the National Registry of
Absentee Voters and his/her permanent disqualification to vote in absentia.

Petitioner posits that Section 5(d) is unconstitutional because it violates


Section 1, Article V of the 1987 Constitution which requires that the voter
must be a resident in the Philippines for at least one year and in the place
where he proposes to vote for at least six months immediately preceding
an election. Petitioner cites the ruling of the Court in Caasi vs. Court of
Appeals12 to support his claim. In that case, the Court held that a "green
card" holder immigrant to the United States is deemed to have abandoned
his domicile and residence in the Philippines.

Petitioner further argues that Section 1, Article V of the Constitution does


not allow provisional registration or a promise by a voter to perform a
condition to be qualified to vote in a political exercise;13 that the legislature
should not be allowed to circumvent the requirement of the Constitution on
the right of suffrage by providing a condition thereon which in effect
amends or alters the aforesaid residence requirement to qualify a Filipino
abroad to vote.14 He claims that the right of suffrage should not be granted
to anyone who, on the date of the election, does not possess the
qualifications provided for by Section 1, Article V of the Constitution.

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