134613-1986-Tan v. Commission On Elections
134613-1986-Tan v. Commission On Elections
134613-1986-Tan v. Commission On Elections
cdasiaonline.com
plebiscite, the President of the Philippines shall appoint the rst ocials of
the province.
"SEC. 5. The Commission on Elections shall conduct and supervise the
plebiscite herein provided, the expenses for which shall be charged to
local funds.
"SEC. 6. This Act shall take eect upon its approval." (Rollo, pp. 23-24)
Section 197 of the Local Government Code enumerates the conditions which
must exist to provide the legal basis for the creation of a provincial unit and
these requisites are:
"SEC. 197. Requisites for Creation. A province may be created if it has
a territory of at least three thousand ve hundred square kilometers, a
population of at least ve hundred thousand persons, an average
estimated annual income, as certied by the Ministry of Finance, of not
less than ten million pesos for the last three consecutive years, and its
creation shall not reduce the population and income of the mother
province or provinces at the time of said creation to less than the
minimum requirements under this section. The territory need not be
contiguous if it comprises two or more islands.
'The average estimated annual income shall include the income alloted for
both the general and infrastructural funds, exclusive of trust funds,
transfers and nonrecurring income. (Rollo, p. 6)
cdasiaonline.com
Petitioners further prayed that the respondent COMELEC hold in abeyance the
issuance of any ocial proclamation of the results of the aforestated plebiscite.
dctai
cdasiaonline.com
55628, March 2, 1984 (128 SCRA 61), particularly the pronouncements therein,
hereunder quoted:
"1. Admittedly, this is one of those cases where the discretion of the
Court is allowed considerable leeway. There is indeed an element of
ambiguity in the use of the expression 'unit or units aected'. It is
plausible to assert as petitioners do that when certain Barangays are
separated from a parent municipality to form a new one, all the voters
therein are aected. It is much more persuasive, however, to contend as
respondents do that the acceptable construction is for those voters, who
are not from the barangays to be separated, should be excluded in the
plebiscite.
"2. For one thing, it is in accordance with the settled doctrine that
between two possible constructions, one avoiding a nding of
unconstitutionality and the other yielding such a result, the former is to
be preferred. That which will save, not that which will destroy, commends
itself for acceptance. After all, the basic presumption all these years is
one of validity. . . .
"3. . . . Adherence to such philosophy compels the conclusion that when
there are indications that the inhabitants of several barangays are inclined
to separate from a parent municipality they should be allowed to do so.
What is more logical than to ascertain their will in a plebiscite called for
that purpose. It is they, and they alone, who shall constitute the new unit.
New responsibilities will be assumed. New burdens will be imposed. A new
municipal corporation will come into existence. Its birth will be a matter of
choice their choice. They should be left alone then to decide for
themselves. To allow other voters to participate will not yield a true
expression of their will. They may even frustrate it. That certainly will be
so if they vote against it for selsh reasons, and they constitute the
majority. That is not to abide by the fundamental principle of the
Constitution to promote local autonomy, the preference being for smaller
units. To rule as this Tribunal does is to follow an accepted principle of
constitutional construction, that in ascertaining the meaning of a
particular provision that may give rise to doubts, the intent of the framers
and of the people may be gleaned from provisions in pari materia."
Respondents submit that said ruling in the aforecited case applies equally with
force in the case at bar. Respondents also maintain that the requisites under the
Local Government Code (P.D. 337) for the creation of the new province of Negros
del Norte have all been duly complied with. Respondents discredit petitioners'
allegations that the requisite area of 3,500 square kilometers as so prescribed in
the Local Government Code for a new province to be created has not been
satised. Petitioners insist that the area which would comprise the new province
of Negros del Norte, would only be about 2,856.56 square kilometers and which
evidently would be lesser than the minimum area prescribed by the governing
statute. Respondents, in this regard, point out and stress that Section 2 of Batas
Pambansa Blg. 885 creating said new province plainly declares that the territorial
boundaries of Negros del Norte comprise an area of 4,019.95 square kilometers,
more or less.
LLjur
cdasiaonline.com
As a nal argument, respondents insist that instant petition has been rendered
moot and academic considering that a plebiscite has been already conducted on
January 3, 1986; that as a result thereof, the corresponding certicate of canvass
indicated that out of 195,134 total votes cast in said plebiscite, 164,734 were in
favor of the creation of Negros del Norte and 30,400 were against it; and because
"the armative votes cast represented a majority of the total votes cast in said
plebiscite, the Chairman of the Board of Canvassers proclaimed the new province
which shall be known as "Negros del Norte". Thus, respondents stress the fact
that following the proclamation of Negros del Norte province, the appointments
of the ocials of said province created were announced. On these considerations,
respondents urge that this case should be dismissed for having been rendered
moot and academic as the creation of the new province is now a " fait accompli."
In resolving this case, it will be useful to note and emphasize the facts which
appear to be agreed to by the parties herein or stand unchallenged.
Firstly, there is no disagreement that the Provincial Treasurer of the Province of
Negros Occidental has not disbursed, nor was required to disburse any public
funds in connection with the plebiscite held on January 3, 1986 as so disclosed in
the Comment to the Petition led by the respondent Provincial Treasurer of
Negros Occidental dated January 20, 1986 (Rollo, pp. 36-37). Thus, the prayer of
the petitioners that said Provincial Treasurer be directed by this Court to desist
from ordering the release of any public funds on account of such plebiscite should
not longer deserve further consideration.
Secondly, in Parliamentary Bill No. 3644 which led to the enactment of Batas
Pambansa Blg. 885 and the creation of the new Province of Negros del Norte, it
expressly declared in Sec. 2 of the aforementioned Parliamentary Bill, the
following:
"SEC. 2. The boundaries of the new province shall be the southern limits
of the City of Silay, the Municipality of Salvador Benedicto and the City of
San Carlos on the South and the natural boundaries of the northern
portion of the Island of Negros on the West, North and East, containing
an area of 285,656 hectares more or less." (Emphasis supplied).
However, when said Parliamentary Bill No. 3644 was very quickly enacted into
Batas Pambansa Blg. 885, the boundaries of the new Province of Negros del
Norte were dened therein and its boundaries then stated to be as follows:
"SEC 1. The Cities of Silay, Cadiz, and San Carlos and the municipalities of
Calatrava, Toboso, Escalante. Sagay, Manapla, Victorias, E.R. Magalona;
and Salvador Benedicto, all in the northern portion of the Island of
Negros, are hereby separated from the Province of Negros Occidental
and constituted into a new province to be known as the Province of
Negros del Norte.
"SEC. 1. The boundaries of the new province shall be the southern limits
of the City of Silay, the Municipality of Salvador Benedicto and the City of
San Carlos on the south and the territorial limits of the northern portion
of the Island of Negros on the West, North and East, comprising a
territory of 4,019.95 square kilometers more or less."
Equally accepted by the parties is the fact that under the certication issued by
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2016
cdasiaonline.com
Although in the above certication it is stated that the land area of the relatively
new municipality of Don Salvador Benedicto is not available, it is an
uncontradicted fact that the area comprising Don Salvador municipality, one of
the component units of the new province, was derived from the City of San
Carlos and from the Municipality of Calatrava, Negros Occidental, and added
thereto was a portion of about one-fourth the land area of the town of Murcia,
Negros Occidental. It is signicant to note the uncontroverted submission of
petitioners that the total land area of the entire municipality of Murcia, Negros
Occidental is only 322.9 square kilometers (Exh. "D", Rollo, p. 91). One-fourth of
this total land area of Murcia that was added to the portions derived from the
land area of Calatrava, Negros Occidental and San Carlos City (Negros
Occidental) would constitute, therefore, only 80.2 square kilometers. This area of
80.2 square kilometers if then added to 2,685.2 square kilometers, representing
the total land area of the Cities of Silay, San Carlos and Cadiz and the
Municipalities of E.R. Magalona, Victorias, Manapla, Sagay, Escalante, Taboso and
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2016
cdasiaonline.com
However, when Batas Pambansa Blg. 885 was enacted, there was a signicant
change in the above provision. The statute, as modied, provides that the
requisite plebiscite "shall be conducted in the proposed new province which
are the areas aected."
It is this legislative determination limiting the plebiscite exclusively to the cities
and towns which would comprise the new province that is assailed by the
petitioners as violative of the provisions of our Constitution. Petitioners submit
that Sec. 3, ART XI thereof, contemplates a plebiscite that would be held in the
unit or units aected by the creation of the new province as a result of the
consequent division of and substantial alteration of the boundaries of the
existing province. In this instance, the voters in the remaining areas of the
province of Negros Occidental should have been allowed to participate in the
questioned plebiscite.
Considering that the legality of the plebiscite itself is challenged for noncompliance with constitutional requisites, the fact that such plebiscite had been
held and a new province proclaimed and its ocials appointed, the case before
Us cannot truly be viewed as already moot and academic. Continuation of the
existence of this newly proclaimed province which petitioners strongly profess to
have been illegally born, deserves to be inquired into by this Tribunal so that, if
indeed, illegality attaches to its creation, the commission of that error should not
provide the very excuse for perpetuation of such wrong. For this Court to yield to
the respondents' urging that, as there has been fait accompli, then this Court
should passively accept and accede to the prevailing situation is an unacceptable
suggestion. Dismissal of the instant petition, as respondents so propose is a
proposition fraught with mischief. Respondents' submission will create a
dangerous precedent. Should this Court decline now to perform its duty of
interpreting and indicating what the law is and should be, this might tempt again
those who strut about in the corridors of power to recklessly and with ulterior
motives, create, merge, divide and/or alter the boundaries of political
subdivisions, either brazenly or stealthily, condent that this Court will abstain
from entertaining future challenges to their acts if they manage to bring about a
fait accompli.
In the light of the facts and circumstances alluded to by petitioners as attending
to the unusually rapid creation of the instant province of Negros del Norte after a
swiftly scheduled plebiscite, this Tribunal has the duty to repudiate and
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2016
cdasiaonline.com
discourage the commission of acts which run counter to the mandate of our
fundamental law, done by whatever branch of our government. This Court gives
notice that it will not look with favor upon those who may be hereafter inclined
to ram through all sorts of legislative measures and then implement the same
with indecent haste, even if such acts would violate the Constitution and the
prevailing statutes of our land. It is illogical to ask that this Tribunal be blind and
deaf to protests on the ground that what is already done is done. To such
untenable argument the reply would be that, be this so, the Court, nevertheless,
still has the duty and right to correct and rectify the wrong brought to its
attention.
cdasiaonline.com
hurries to pray at the temple but then spits at the idol therein.
We nd no merit in the submission of the respondents that the petition should be
dismissed because the motive and wisdom in enacting the law may not be
challenged by petitioners. The principal point raised by the petitioners is not the
wisdom and motive in enacting the law but the infringement of the Constitution
which is a proper subject of judicial inquiry.
Petitioners' discussion regarding the motives behind the enactment of B.P. Blg.
885 to say the least, are most enlightening and provoking but are factual issues
the Court cannot properly pass upon in this case. Mention by petitioners of the
unexplained changes or dierences in the proposed Parliamentary Bill No. 3644
and the enacted Batas Pambansa Blg. 885; the swift and surreptitious manner of
passage and approval of said law; the abrupt scheduling of the plebiscite; the
reference to news articles regarding the questionable conduct of the said
plebiscite held on January 3, 1986; all serve as interesting reading but are not
the decisive matters which should be reckoned in the resolution of this case.
What the Court considers the only signicant submissions lending a little support
to respondents' case is their reliance on the rulings and pronouncements made
by this Court in the case of Governor Zosimo Paredes versus The Honorable
Executive Secretary to the President, et al., G.R. No. 55628, March 2, 1984 (128
SCRA 6). In said case relating to a plebiscite held to ratify the creation of a new
municipality from existing barangays, this Court upheld the legality of the
plebiscite which was participated in exclusively by the people of the barangay
that would constitute the new municipality.
cda
This Court is not unmindful of this solitary case alluded to by respondents. What
is, however, highly signicant are the prefatory statements therein stating that
said case is "one of those cases where the discretion of the Court is allowed
considerable leeway" and that "there is indeed an element of ambiguity in the
use of the expression "unit or units aected." The ruling rendered in said case
was based on a claimed prerogative of the Court then to exercise its discretion on
the matter. It did not resolve the question of how the pertinent provision of the
Constitution should be correctly interpreted.
The ruling in the aforestated case of Paredes vs. The Honorable Executive
Secretary, et al. (supra) should not be taken as a doctrinal or compelling
precedent when it is acknowledged therein that "it is plausible to assert, as
petitioners do, that when certain Barangays are separated from a parent
municipality to form a new one, all the voters therein are aected."
It is relevant and most proper to mention that in the aforecited case of Paredes
vs. Executive Secretary, invoked by respondents, We nd very lucidly expressed
the strong dissenting view of Justice Vicente Abad Santos, a distinguished
member of this Court, as he therein voiced his opinion, which We hereunder
quote:
"2. . . . when the Constitution speaks of "the unit or units aected" it
means all of the people of the municipality if the municipality is to be
divided such as in the case at bar or all of the people of two or more
municipalities if there be a merger. I see no ambiguity in the Constitutional
provision."
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2016
cdasiaonline.com
This dissenting opinion of Justice Vicente Abad Santos is the forerunner of the
ruling which We now consider applicable to the case at bar. In the analogous case
of Emilio C. Lopez, Jr., versus the Honorable Commission on Elections, L-56022,
May 31, 1985, 136 SCRA 633, this dissent was reiterated by Justice Abad Santos
as he therein assailed as suering from a constitutional inrmity a referendum
which did not include all the people of Bulacan and Rizal, when such referendum
was intended to ascertain if the people of said provinces were willing to give up
some of their towns to Metropolitan Manila. His dissenting opinion served as a
useful guideline in the instant case.
Opportunity to re-examine the views formerly held in said cases is now aorded
the present Court. The reasons in the mentioned cases invoked by respondents
herein were formerly considered acceptable because of the views then taken that
local autonomy would be better promoted. However, even this consideration no
longer retains persuasive value.
The environmental facts in the case before Us readily disclose that the subject
matter under consideration is of greater magnitude with concomitant
multifarious complicated problems. In the earlier case, what was involved was a
division of a barangay which is the smallest political unit in the Local
Government Code. Understandably, few and lesser problems are involved. In the
case at bar, creation of a new province relates to the largest political unit
contemplated in Section 3, Art. XI of the Constitution. To form the new province
of Negros del Norte no less than three cities and eight municipalities will be
subtracted from the parent province of Negros Occidental. This will result in the
removal of approximately 2,768.4 square kilometers from the land area of an
existing province whose boundaries will be consequently substantially altered. It
becomes easy to realize that the consequent eects of the division of the parent
province necessarily will aect all the people living in the separate areas of
Negros Occidental and the proposed province of Negros del Norte. The economy
of the parent province as well as that of the new province will be inevitably
aected, either for the better or for the worse. Whatever be the case, either or
both of these political groups will be aected and they are, therefore, the unit or
units referred to in Section 3 of Article XI of the Constitution which must be
included in the plebiscite contemplated therein.
It is a well accepted rule that "in ascertaining the meaning of a particular
provision that may give rise to doubts, the intent of the framers and of the
people, may be gleaned from the provisions in pari materia." Parliamentary Bill
No. 3644 which proposed the creation of the new province of Negros del Norte
recites in Sec. 4 thereof that "the plebiscite shall be conducted in the areas
aected within a period of one hundred and twenty days from the approval of
this Act." As this draft legislation speaks of "areas," what was contemplated
evidently are plurality of areas to participate in the plebiscite. Logically, those to
be included in such plebiscite would be the people living in the area of the
proposed new province and those living in the parent province. This assumption
will be consistent with the requirements set forth in the Constitution.
We fail to nd any legal basis for the unexplained change made when
Parliamentary Bill No. 3644 was enacted into Batas Pambansa Blg. 885 so that it
is now provided in said enabling law that the plebiscite "shall be conducted in the
proposed new province which are the areas aected." We are not disposed to
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2016
cdasiaonline.com
agree that by mere legislative at the unit or units aected referred in the
fundamental law can be diminished or restricted by the Batasang Pambansa to
cities and municipalities comprising the new province, thereby ignoring the
evident reality that there are other people necessarily aected.
In the mind of the Court, the change made by those responsible for the
enactment of Batas Pambansa Blg. 885 betrays their own misgivings. They must
have entertained apprehensions that by holding the plebiscite only in the areas
of the new proposed province, this tactic will be tainted with illegality. In
anticipation of a possible strong challenge to the legality of such a plebiscite
there was, therefore, deliberately added in the enacted statute a self-serving
phrase that the new province constitutes the area aected. Such additional
statement serves no useful purpose for the same is misleading, erroneous and far
from truth. The remaining portion of the parent province is as much an area
aected. The substantial alteration of the boundaries of the parent province, not
to mention the other adverse economic eects it might suer, eloquently argue
the points raised by the petitioners.
LLpr
Petitioners have averred without contradiction that after the creation of Negros
del Norte, the province of Negros Occidental would be deprived of the long
established Cities of Silay, Cadiz, and San Carlos, as well as the municipality of
Victorias. No controversion has been made regarding petitioners' assertion that
the areas of the Province of Negros Occidental will be diminished by about
285,656 hectares and it will lose seven of the fteen sugar mills which
contribute to the economy of the whole province. In the language of petitioners,
"to create Negros del Norte, the existing territory and political subdivision known
as Negros Occidental has to be partitioned and dismembered. What was involved
was no 'birth' but "amputation." We agree with the petitioners that in the case
of Negros what was involved was a division, a separation; and consequently, as
Sec. 3 of Article XI of the Constitution anticipates, a substantial alteration of
boundary.
As contended by petitioners,
"Indeed, the terms 'created', 'divided', 'merged', 'abolished' as used in the
constitutional provision do not contemplate distinct situation isolated from
the mutually exclusive to each other. A province maybe created where an
existing province is divided or two provinces merged. Such cases
necessarily will involve existing unit or units abolished and denitely the
boundary being substantially altered.
"It would thus be inaccurate to state that where an existing political unit is
divided or its boundary substantially altered, as the Constitution provides,
only some and not all the voters in the whole unit which suers
dismemberment or substantial alteration of its boundary are aected.
Rather, the contrary is true."
It is also Our considered view that even hypothetically assuming that the merits
of this case can depend on the mere discretion that this Court may exercise,
nevertheless, it is the petitioners' case that deserve to be favored.
It is now time for this Court to set aside the equivocations and the indecisive
pronouncements in the adverted case of Paredes vs. the Honorable Executive
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2016
cdasiaonline.com
Secretary, et al. (supra). For the reasons already here expressed, We now state
that the ruling in the two mentioned cases sanctioning the exclusion of the
voters belonging to an existing political unit from which the new political unit
will be derived, from participating in the plebiscite conducted for the purpose of
determining the formation of another new political unit, is hereby abandoned.
In their supplemental petition, dated January 4, 1986, it is prayed for by
petitioners that a writ of mandamus be issued, directing the respondent
Commission on Elections, to schedule the holding of another plebiscite at which
all the qualied voters of the entire province of Negros Occidental as now
existing shall participate and that this Court make a pronouncement that the
plebiscite held on January 3, 1986 has no legal eect for being a patent nullity.
The Court is prepared to declare the said plebiscite held on January 3, 1986 as
null and void and violative of the provisions of Sec. 3, Article XI of the
Constitution. The Court is not, however, disposed to direct the conduct of a new
plebiscite, because We nd no legal basis to do so. With constitutional inrmity
attaching to the subject Batas Pambansa Blg. 885 and also because the creation
of the new province of Negros del Norte is not in accordance with the criteria
established in the Local Government Code, the factual and legal basis for the
creation of such new province which should justify the holding of another
plebiscite does not exist.
Whatever claim it has to validity and whatever recognition has been gained by
the new province of Negros del Norte because of the appointment of the ocials
thereof, must now be erased. That Negros del Norte is but a legal ction should
be announced. Its existence should be put to an end as quickly as possible, if only
to settle the complications currently attending to its creation. As has been
manifested, the parent province of Negros del Norte has been impleaded as the
defendant in a suit led by the new Province of Negros del Norte, before the
Regional Trial Court of Negros (del Norte), docketed as Civil Case No. 169-C, for
the immediate allocation, distribution and transfer of funds by the parent
province to the new province, in an amount claimed to be at least
P10,000,000.00.
The nal nail that puts to rest whatever pretension there is to the legality of the
province of Negros del Norte is the signicant fact that this created province does
not even satisfy the area requirement prescribed in Section 197 of the Local
Government Code, as earlier discussed.
prLL
cdasiaonline.com
respondents that in this regard the marginal sea within the three mile limit
should be considered in determining the extent of the territory of the new
province. Such an interpretation is strained, incorrect, and fallacious.
The last sentence of the rst paragraph of Section 197 is most revealing. As so
stated therein the "territory need not be contiguous if it comprises two or more
islands." The use of the word territory in this particular provision of the Local
Government Code and in the very last sentence thereof, clearly, reects that
"territory" as therein used, has reference only to the mass of land area and
excludes the waters over which the political unit exercises control.
Said sentence states that the "territory need not be contiguous." Contiguous
means (a) in physical contact; (b) touching along all or most of one side; (c) near,
text, or adjacent (Webster's New World Dictionary, 1972 Ed., p. 307).
"Contiguous", when employed as an adjective, as in the above sentence, is only
used when it describes physical contact, or a touching of sides of two solid
masses of matter. The meaning of particular terms in a statute may be
ascertained by reference to words associated with or related to them in the
statute (Animal Rescue League vs. Assessors, 138 A.L.R., p. 110). Therefore, in the
context of the sentence above, what need not be "contiguous" is the "territory"
the physical mass of land area. There would arise no need for the legislators to
use the word contiguous if they had intended that the term "territory" embrace
not only land area but also territorial waters, It can be safely concluded that the
word territory in the rst paragraph of Section 197 is meant to be synonymous
with "land area" only. The words and phrases used in a statute should be given
the meaning intended by the legislature (82 C.J.S., p. 636). The sense in which
the words are used furnished the rule of construction (In re Winton Lumber Co.,
63 p. 2d., p. 664).
The distinction between "territory" and "land area" which respondents make is
an articial or strained construction of the disputed provision whereby the words
of the statute are arrested from their plain and obvious meaning and made to
bear an entirely dierent meaning to justify an absurd or unjust result. The plain
meaning in the language in a statute is the safest guide to follow in construing
the statute. A construction based on a forced or articial meaning of its words
and out of harmony of the statutory scheme is not to be favored (Helvering vs.
Hutchings, 85 L. Ed., p. 909).
It would be rather preposterous to maintain that a province with a small land
area but which has a long, narrow, extended coast line, (such as La Union
province) can be said to have a larger territory than a land-locked province (such
as Ifugao or Benguet) whose land area manifestly exceeds the province rst
mentioned.
Allegations have been made that the enactment of the questioned state was
marred by "dirty tricks", in the introduction and passing of Parliamentary Bill No.
3644 "in secret haste" pursuant to sinister designs to achieve "pure and simple
gerrymandering"; "that recent happenings more than amply demonstrate that
far from guaranteeing its autonomy it (Negros del Norte) has become the
efdom of a local strongman" (Rollo, p. 43; parenthesis supplied).
It is not for this Court to arm or reject such matters not only because the
merits of this case can be resolved without need of ascertaining the real motives
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2016
cdasiaonline.com
and wisdom in the making of the questioned law. No proper challenge on those
grounds can also be made by petitioners in this proceeding. Neither may this
Court venture to guess the motives or wisdom in the exercise of legislative
powers. Repudiation of improper or unwise actions taken by tools of a political
machinery rests ultimately, as recent events have shown, on the electorate and
the power of a vigilant people.
cdlex
Petitioners herein deserve and should receive the gratitude of the people of the
Province of Negros Occidental and even by our Nation. Commendable is the
patriotism displayed by them in daring to institute this case in order to preserve
the continued existence of their historic province. They were inspired
undoubtedly by their faithful commitment to our Constitution which they wish
to be respected and obeyed. Despite the setbacks and the hardships which
petitioners aver confronted them, they valiantly and unfalteringly pursued a
worthy cause. A happy destiny for our Nation is assured as long as among our
people there would be exemplary citizens such as the petitioners herein.
Separate Opinions
TEEHANKEE, C .J ., concurring:
I congratulate my brethren for the unanimous decision we issue today striking
down an Act approved in "deep secrecy and inordinate haste" apparently on the
last day of session of the Batasang Pambansa on December 3, 1985 and signed
on the same day by the then President of the authoritarian regime. The Act
provided for the partitioning of the province of Negros Occidental and would
substantially alter its boundaries by lopping o the progressive cities of Silay,
Cadiz and San Carlos and municipality of Victorias with seven other
municipalities to constitute the proposed new province of Negros del Norte.
Negros Occidental would thereby lose 4,019.95 square kilometers in area and
seven of fteen sugar mills which contribute to the economic progress and
welfare of the whole province.
Cdpr
cdasiaonline.com
3, 1986, notwithstanding that the Act itself provided for an ample period of 120
days from its approval within which to inform the people of the proposed
dismemberment and allow them to freely express and discuss the momentous
issue and cast their vote intelligently. This was learned by petitioners through an
item in the printed media one day before they led the present rush petition on
December 23, 1985 to seek a restraining order to atop the plebiscite, even as no
printed copies of the Act as nally enacted and approved were available to them
and the Act had not been published, as required by law, for its eectivity. As
petitioners ruefully state: "it was in vain hope" for everything had apparently
been timed for the Christmas holidays; the Court was in Christmas recess and
"there was no chance to have their plea for a restraining order acted upon
speedily enough." In fact, it was only on January 7, 1986 that the Court took
cognizance of the petition and required respondents' comment.
The scenario, as petitioners urgently asserted, was "to have the creation of the
new Province a fait accompli by the time elections are held on February 7, 1986.
The transparent purpose is unmistakably so that the new Governor and other
ocials shall by then have been installed in oce, ready to function for purposes
of the election for President and Vice-President." Thus, the petitioners reported
after the event: "With indecent haste, the plebiscite was held; Negros del Norte
was set up and proclaimed by President Marcos as in existence; a new set of
government ocials headed by Governor Armando Gustilo was appointed; and,
by the time the elections were held on February 7, 1986, the political machinery
was in place to deliver the 'solid North' to ex-President Marcos. The rest is history.
What happened in Negros del Norte during the elections the unashamed use
of naked power and resources contributed in no small way to arousing
'people's power' and steel the ordinary citizen to perform deeds of courage and
patriotism that makes one proud to be a Filipino today." (Record, pp. 9, 41).
The challenged Act is manifestly void and unconstitutional. Consequently, all the
implementing acts complained of, viz. the plebiscite, the proclamation of a new
province of Negros del Norte and the appointment of its ocials are equally void.
The limited holding of the plebiscite only in the areas of the proposed new
province (as provided by Section 4 of the Act) to the exclusion of the voters of
the remaining areas of the integral province of Negros Occidental (namely, the
three cities of Bacolod, Bago and La Carlota and the Municipalities of La
Castellana, Isabela, Moises Padilla, Pontevedra, Hinigaran, Himamaylan,
Kabankalan, Murcia, Valladolid, San Enrique, Ilog, Cauayan, Hinoba-an and
Sipalay and Candoni), grossly contravenes and disregards the mandate of Article
XI, section 3 of the then prevailing 1973 Constitution that no province may be
created or divided or its boundary substantially altered without "the approval of
a majority of the votes in a plebiscite in the unit or units aected. " It is plain
that all the cities and municipalities of the province of Negros Occidental, not
merely those of the proposed new province, comprise the units aected. It
follows that the voters of the whole and entire province of Negros Occidental
have to participate and give their approval in the plebiscite, because the whole
province is aected by its proposed division and substantial alteration of its
boundary. To limit the plebiscite to only the voters of the areas to be partitioned
and seceded from the province is as absurd and illogical as allowing only the
secessionists to vote for the secession that they demanded against the wishes of
the majority and to nullify the basic principle of majority rule.
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2016
cdasiaonline.com
The argument of fait accompli viz. that the railroaded plebiscite of January 3,
1986 was held and can no longer be enjoined and that the new province of
Negros del Norte has been constituted, begs the issue of invalidity of the
challenged Act. This Court has always held that it "does not look with favor upon
parties 'racing to beat an injunction or restraining order' which they have reason
to believe might be forthcoming from the Court by virtue of the ling and
pendency of the appropriate petition therefor. Where the restraining order or
preliminary injunction are found to have been properly issued, as in the case at
bar, mandatory writs shall be issued by the Court to restore matters to the status
quo ante." (Banzon v. Cruz, 45 SCRA 475, 506 [1972]). Where, as in this case,
there was somehow a failure to properly issue the restraining order stopping the
holding of the illegal plebiscite, the Court will issue the mandatory writ or
judgment to restore matters to the status quo ante and restore the territorial
integrity of the province of Negros Occidental by declaring the
unconstitutionality of the challenged Act and nullifying the invalid proclamation
of the proposed new province of Negros del Norte and the equally invalid
appointment of its ocials.
cdasia
cdasiaonline.com