2015mcle - Viday Digest
2015mcle - Viday Digest
2015mcle - Viday Digest
The petition seeks to reverse and set aside the Decision of the
COMELEC En Banc in the case of [1] "Atty. Alicia Risos-Vidal v. Joseph
Ejercito Estrada" for having been rendered with grave abuse of discretion
amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction when the COMELEC denied her
petition to disqualify Joseph Estrada from running a City Mayor of Manila
during the 2013 elections and [2] a Petition-in-Intervention filed by Alfredo S.
Lim (Lim), wherein he prays to be declared the 2013 winning candidate for
Mayor of the City of Manila in view of private respondent former President
Joseph Ejercito Estradas (former President Estrada) disqualification to run for
and hold public office.
The Facts
The penalty imposable for the crime of plunder under Republic Act No.
7080, as amended by Republic Act No. 7659, is Reclusion Perpetua to Death.
There being no aggravating or mitigating circumstances, however, the lesser
penalty shall be applied in accordance with Article 63 of the Revised Penal
Code.
MALACAAN PALACE
MANILA
By the President of the Philippines
PARDON
WHEREAS, Joseph Ejercito Estrada has been under detention for six
and a half years,
While the case was pending before the Supreme Court, or on May 13,
2013, the elections were conducted as scheduled and former President
Estrada was voted into office with 349,770 votes cast in his favor. The next
day, the local board of canvassers proclaimed him as the duly elected Mayor
of the City of Manila. On June 7, 2013, Lim, one of former President Estradas
opponents for the position of Mayor, moved for leave to intervene in this case.
His motion was granted by the Court in a Resolution15 dated June 25, 2013.
Lim subscribed to Risos-Vidals theory that former President Estrada is
disqualified to run for and hold public office as the pardon granted to the latter
failed to expressly remit his perpetual disqualification. Further, given that
former President Estrada is disqualified to run for and hold public office, all the
votes obtained by the latter should be declared stray, and, being the second
placer with 313,764 votes to his name, he (Lim) should be declared the
rightful winning candidate for the position of Mayor of the City of Manila.
The Issue
In her petition, Risos-Vidal starts her discussion by pointing out that the
pardon granted to former President Estrada was conditional as evidenced by
the latters express acceptance thereof. The acceptance, she claims, is an
indication of the conditional nature of the pardon, with the condition being
embodied in the third Whereas Clause of the pardon, i.e., WHEREAS,
Joseph Ejercito Estrada has publicly committed to no longer seek any elective
position or office. She explains that the aforementioned commitment was
what impelled former President Arroyo to pardon former President Estrada,
without it, the clemency would not have been extended. And any breach
thereof, that is, when former President Estrada filed his Certificate of
Candidacy for President and Mayor of the City of Manila, he breached the
condition of the pardon; hence, he ought to be recommitted to prison to serve
the unexpired portion of his sentence x x x and disqualifies him as a candidate
for the mayoralty [position] of Manila.
ART. 36. Pardon; its effects. A pardon shall not work the restoration
of the right to hold public office, or the right of suffrage, unless such
rights be expressly restored by the terms of the pardon.
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On the other hand, the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG) for public
respondent COMELEC, maintains that the issue of whether or not the pardon
extended to [former President Estrada] restored his right to run for public
office had already been passed upon by public respondent COMELEC way
back in 2010 via its rulings in SPA Nos. 09-024, 09-028 and 09-104, there is
no cogent reason for it to reverse its standing pronouncement and declare
[former President Estrada] disqualified to run and be voted as mayor of the
City of Manila in the absence of any new argument that would warrant its
reversal. To be sure, public respondent COMELEC correctly exercised its
discretion in taking judicial cognizance of the aforesaid rulings which are
known to it and which can be verified from its own records, in accordance with
Section 2, Rule 129 of the Rules of Court on the courts discretionary power to
take judicial notice of matters which are of public knowledge, or are capable of
unquestionable demonstration, or ought to be known to them because of their
judicial functions.
Thus, the OSG concludes that the COMELEC did not commit grave
abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction in issuing the
assailed Resolutions.
For his part, former President Estrada presents the following significant
arguments to defend his stay in office: that the factual findings of public
respondent COMELEC, the Constitutional body mandated to administer and
enforce all laws relative to the conduct of the elections, [relative to the
absoluteness of the pardon, the effects thereof, and the eligibility of former
President Estrada to seek public elective office] are binding [and conclusive]
on this Honorable Supreme Court; that he was granted an absolute pardon
and thereby restored to his full civil and political rights, including the right to
seek public elective office such as the mayoral (sic) position in the City of
Manila; that the majority decision in the case of Salvacion A. Monsanto v.
Fulgencio S. Factoran, Jr., which was erroneously cited by both Vidal and Lim
as authority for their respective claims, x x x reveal that there was no
discussion whatsoever in the ratio decidendi of the Monsanto case as to the
alleged necessity for an expressed restoration of the right to hold public office
in the pardon as a legal prerequisite
to remove the subject perpetual special disqualification; that moreover, the
principal question raised in this Monsanto case is whether or not a public
officer, who has been granted an absolute pardon by the Chief Executive, is
entitled to reinstatement to her former position without need of a new
appointment; that his expressed acceptance [of the pardon] is not proof that
the pardon extended to [him] is conditional and not absolute; that this case is
a mere rehash of the cases filed against him during his candidacy for
President back in 2009-2010; that Articles 36 and 41 of the Revised Penal
Code cannot abridge or diminish the pardoning power of the President
expressly granted by the Constitution; that the text of the pardon granted to
him substantially, if not fully, complied with the requirement posed by Article
36 of the Revised Penal Code as it was categorically stated in the said
document that he was restored to his civil and political rights; that since
pardon is an act of grace, it must be construed favorably in favour of the
grantee; and that his disqualification will result in massive disenfranchisement
of the hundreds of thousands of Manileos who voted for him.
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impeachment cases;
cases that have not yet resulted in a final conviction; and
cases involving violations of election laws, rules and regulations in
which there was no favorable recommendation coming from the
COMELEC.
Therefore, it can be argued that any act of Congress by way of statute cannot
operate to delimit the pardoning power of the President. In Cristobal v.
Labrador and Pelobello v. Palatino, which were decided under the 1935
Constitution, wherein the provision granting pardoning power to the President
shared similar phraseology with what is found in the present 1987
Constitution, the Court then unequivocally declared that subject to the
limitations imposed by the Constitution, the pardoning power cannot be
restricted or controlled by legislative action.
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THE DISQUALIFICATION OF
FORMER President Estrada under
Section 40 of the LGC in relation
to Section 12 of the OEC was
removed by his acceptance of the
absolute pardon granted to him.
Section 40 of the LGC identifies who are disqualified from running for any
elective local position. Risos-Vidal argues that former President Estrada is
disqualified under item (a), to wit: