David v. Comelec
David v. Comelec
David v. Comelec
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G.R. No. 127116. April 8, 1997.
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* EN BANC.
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PANGANIBAN, J.:
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1 Sen. Pimentel was the principal author of the Local Government Code
of 1991.
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The Issues
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place9
in May, 1997, as provided for in RA 7160, Sec. 43
(c).” Besides, petitioners cannot claim a term of more than
three years since they were elected under the aegis of the
Local Government Code of 1991 which prescribes a term of
only three years. Finally, Respondent Comelec denies the
charge of grave abuse of discretion stating that the
“question presented x x x is a purely legal one involving no
exercise of an act without or 10in excess of jurisdiction or
with grave abuse of discretion.”
As amicus curiae, former Senator Aquilino Q. Pimentel,
Jr. urges the Court to deny the petitions because (1) the
Local Autonomy Code repealed both RA 6679 and 6653 “not
only by implication but by design as well”; (2) the
legislative intent is to shorten the term of barangay
officials to three years; (3) the barangay officials should not
have a term longer than that of their administrative
superiors, the city and municipal mayors; and (4) barangay
officials are estopped from contesting the applicability of
the threeyear term provided by the Local Government
Code as they were elected under the provisions of said
Code.
From the foregoing discussions of the parties, the Court
believes that the issues can be condensed into three, as
follows:
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The Encyclopedia of the Philippines, Vol. XI, 1953 Ed. p. 12, authored by Zoilo M.
Galang relates that “(t)he word BARANGAY is originally BALANGAY from the
Malay BALANG which means a boat larger than the Chinese sampan. It is used in
the diminutive sense, having the suffix ay x x x. The etymology of this word
confirms what the historians say about the way the Malay people emigrated for
the first time to (our) Islands. They came in small boats (BALANGAY). These
groups by BALANGAY were found by the Spaniards and kept by them to the end
of their dominion.”
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give effect to the intent of the law. And three years is the
obvious intent.
First. RA 7160, the Local Government Code, was
enacted later than RA 6679. It is basic that in case of an
irreconciliable conflict between two 31laws of different
vintages, the later enactment prevails. Legis posteriores
priores contrarias abrogant. The rationale is simple: a later
law repeals an earlier one because it is the later legislative
will. It is to be presumed that the lawmakers knew the
older law and intended to change it. In enacting the older
law, the legislators could not have known the newer one
and hence could not have intended to change what they did
not know. Under32 the Civil Code, laws are repealed only by
subsequent ones —and not the other way around.
Under Sec. 43c of RA 7160, the term of office of
barangay officials was fixed at “three (3) years which shall
begin after the regular election of barangay officials on the
second Monday of May 1994.” This provision is clearly
inconsistent with and repugnant to Sec. 1 of RA 6679 which
states that such “term shall be for five years.” Note that
both laws refer to the same officials who were elected “on
the second Monday of May 1994.”
Second. RA 6679 requires the barangay voters to elect
seven kagawads and the candidate obtaining the highest
number of votes shall automatically be the punong
barangay. RA 6653 empowers the seven elected barangay
kagawads to select the punong barangay from among
themselves. On the other hand, the Local Autonomy Code
mandates a direct vote on the barangay chairman by the
entire barangay electorate, separately from the seven
kagawads. Hence, under the Code, voters elect eight
barangay officials, namely, the punong barangay plus the
seven kagawads. Under both RA 6679 and 6653, they vote
for only seven kagawads, and not for the barangay
chairman.
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30 Collector of Internal Revenue vs. Manila Lodge No. 761, 105 Phil.
983, cited in Agpalo, Statutory Construction, 1990 Ed. p. 36; Francisco,
Statutory Construction, Third Ed., pp. 5 and 106; Martin, Statutory
Construction, 1979 Ed. p. 40.
31 Agpalo, Statutory Construction, 1990 Ed. p. 294.
32 Art. 7, Civil Code.
102
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33 RA 8250.
34 G.R. No. 123169, November 4, 1996.
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35 If the Local Government Code merely provided that all local officials,
without specifying barangay officials, “shall have a term of three years,”
then such provision could be deemed a general law. But the Code
provision in question (Sec. 43[c]) specifically and specially mentioned
barangay officials. Hence, such provision ceased to be a general law.
Rather, it assumes the nature of a special law, or a special provision of a
code of laws.
36 Sec. 534.
37 Iloilo Palay vs. Feliciano, 13 SCRA 377, March 3, 1965; Joaquin vs.
Navarro, 81 Phil. 373 (1948).
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38 Abbas vs. Comelec, 179 SCRA 287, 301, November 10, 1989; Lim vs.
Paquing, 240 SCRA 649, January 27, 1995; People vs. Permakiel, 173
SCRA 324, 675, May 12, 1989; La Union Electric Cooperative vs. Yaranon,
179 SCRA 828, 836, December 4, 1989.
39Basco vs. Pagcor, 197 SCRA 52, 68, May 14, 1991.
40Garcia vs. Comelec, 227 SCRA 100, October 5, 1993.
41 Vol. III, pp. 406408 and 451.
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As pointed out by Amicus Curiae Pimentel, petitioners are
barred by estoppel from pursuing their petitions.
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VOL. 271, APRIL 8, 1997 107
David vs. Commission on Elections
“BARANGAY 77
CERTIFIED LIST OF CANDIDATES
VOTES OBTAINED
May 9, 1994 BARANGAY ELECTIONS
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and all the rules, orders and directives governing the elections in 1994
were prepared, promulgated and implemented by COMELEC.” He asserts
that the “blame” for the failure of the RA 7160 to expressly repeal RA
6653 and 6679 and the confusion resulting therefrom should be laid on
Sen. Pimentel, the principal author of RA 7610, and not on the “lowly and
innocent 420,000 elected barangay officials” who are seeking “for the first
time a judicial interpretation of the laws and issues involved x x x.”
43 Rollo, pp. 75, 86; G.R. No. 127116.
44Ibid., p. 87.
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Epilogue
Petition denied.
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