G.R. No. L-63915 April 24, 1985
LORENZO M. TAÑADA, ABRAHAM F. SARMIENTO,
and MOVEMENT OF ATTORNEYS FOR BROTHERHOOD, INTEGRITY AND NATIONALISM, INC.
[MABINI], petitioners,
vs.
HON. JUAN C. TUVERA, in his capacity as
Executive Assistant to the President, HON. JOAQUIN VENUS, in his capacity as
Deputy Executive Assistant to the President , MELQUIADES P. DE LA CRUZ, in his
capacity as Director, Malacañang Records Office, and FLORENDO S. PABLO, in his
capacity as Director, Bureau of Printing, respondents.
ESCOLIN, J.:
Invoking the people's right to
be informed on matters of public concern, a right recognized in Section 6,
Article IV of the 1973 Philippine Constitution, 1 as well as the
principle that laws to be valid and enforceable must be published in the Official
Gazette or otherwise effectively promulgated, petitioners seek a writ of
mandamus to compel respondent public officials to publish, and/or cause the
publication in the Official Gazette of various presidential decrees, letters of
instructions, general orders, proclamations, executive orders, letter of
implementation and administrative orders.
Specifically, the publication
of the following presidential issuances is sought:
a] Presidential Decrees Nos. 12,
22, 37, 38, 59, 64, 103, 171, 179, 184, 197, 200, 234, 265, 286, 298, 303, 312,
324, 325, 326, 337, 355, 358, 359, 360, 361, 368, 404, 406, 415, 427, 429, 445,
447, 473, 486, 491, 503, 504, 521, 528, 551, 566, 573, 574, 594, 599, 644, 658,
661, 718, 731, 733, 793, 800, 802, 835, 836, 923, 935, 961, 1017-1030, 1050,
1060-1061, 1085, 1143, 1165, 1166, 1242, 1246, 1250, 1278, 1279, 1300, 1644,
1772, 1808, 1810, 1813-1817, 1819-1826, 1829-1840, 1842-1847.
b] Letter of Instructions
Nos.: 10, 39, 49, 72, 107, 108, 116, 130, 136, 141, 150, 153, 155, 161,
173, 180, 187, 188, 192, 193, 199, 202, 204, 205, 209, 211-213, 215-224,
226-228, 231-239, 241-245, 248, 251, 253-261, 263-269, 271-273, 275-283,
285-289, 291, 293, 297-299, 301-303, 309, 312-315, 325, 327, 343, 346, 349,
357, 358, 362, 367, 370, 382, 385, 386, 396-397, 405, 438-440, 444- 445, 473,
486, 488, 498, 501, 399, 527, 561, 576, 587, 594, 599, 600, 602, 609, 610, 611,
612, 615, 641, 642, 665, 702, 712-713, 726, 837-839, 878-879, 881, 882,
939-940, 964,997,1149-1178,1180-1278.
c] General Orders Nos.: 14,
52, 58, 59, 60, 62, 63, 64 & 65.
d] Proclamation Nos.: 1126,
1144, 1147, 1151, 1196, 1270, 1281, 1319-1526, 1529, 1532, 1535, 1538,
1540-1547, 1550-1558, 1561-1588, 1590-1595, 1594-1600, 1606-1609, 1612-1628,
1630-1649, 1694-1695, 1697-1701, 1705-1723, 1731-1734, 1737-1742, 1744,
1746-1751, 1752, 1754, 1762, 1764-1787, 1789-1795, 1797, 1800, 1802-1804,
1806-1807, 1812-1814, 1816, 1825-1826, 1829, 1831-1832, 1835-1836, 1839-1840,
1843-1844, 1846-1847, 1849, 1853-1858, 1860, 1866, 1868, 1870, 1876-1889, 1892,
1900, 1918, 1923, 1933, 1952, 1963, 1965-1966, 1968-1984, 1986-2028, 2030-2044,
2046-2145, 2147-2161, 2163-2244.
e] Executive Orders Nos.: 411,
413, 414, 427, 429-454, 457- 471, 474-492, 494-507, 509-510, 522, 524-528,
531-532, 536, 538, 543-544, 549, 551-553, 560, 563, 567-568, 570, 574, 593,
594, 598-604, 609, 611- 647, 649-677, 679-703, 705-707, 712-786, 788-852,
854-857.
f] Letters of Implementation
Nos.: 7, 8, 9, 10, 11-22, 25-27, 39, 50, 51, 59, 76, 80-81, 92, 94, 95,
107, 120, 122, 123.
g] Administrative Orders Nos.: 347,
348, 352-354, 360- 378, 380-433, 436-439.
The respondents, through the
Solicitor General, would have this case dismissed outright on the ground that petitioners
have no legal personality or standing to bring the instant petition. The view
is submitted that in the absence of any showing that petitioners are personally
and directly affected or prejudiced by the alleged non-publication of the
presidential issuances in question 2 said petitioners are without the
requisite legal personality to institute this mandamus proceeding, they are not
being "aggrieved parties" within the meaning of Section 3, Rule 65 of
the Rules of Court, which we quote:
SEC. 3. Petition for
Mandamus.—When any tribunal, corporation, board or person unlawfully neglects
the performance of an act which the law specifically enjoins as a duty
resulting from an office, trust, or station, or unlawfully excludes another
from the use a rd enjoyment of a right or office to which such other is
entitled, and there is no other plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the
ordinary course of law, the person aggrieved thereby may file a verified
petition in the proper court alleging the facts with certainty and praying that
judgment be rendered commanding the defendant, immediately or at some other
specified time, to do the act required to be done to Protect the rights of the
petitioner, and to pay the damages sustained by the petitioner by reason of the
wrongful acts of the defendant.
Upon the other hand,
petitioners maintain that since the subject of the petition concerns a public
right and its object is to compel the performance of a public duty, they need
not show any specific interest for their petition to be given due course.
The issue posed is not one of
first impression. As early as the 1910 case of Severino vs. Governor
General, 3 this Court held that while the general rule is that
"a writ of mandamus would be granted to a private individual only in those
cases where he has some private or particular interest to be subserved, or some
particular right to be protected, independent of that which he holds with the
public at large," and "it is for the public officers exclusively to
apply for the writ when public rights are to be subserved [Mithchell vs.
Boardmen, 79 M.e., 469]," nevertheless, "when the question is one of
public right and the object of the mandamus is to procure the enforcement of a
public duty, the people are regarded as the real party in interest and the relator
at whose instigation the proceedings are instituted need not show that he has
any legal or special interest in the result, it being sufficient to show that
he is a citizen and as such interested in the execution of the laws [High,
Extraordinary Legal Remedies, 3rd ed., sec. 431].
Thus, in said case, this Court
recognized the relator Lope Severino, a private individual, as a proper party
to the mandamus proceedings brought to compel the Governor General to call a
special election for the position of municipal president in the town of Silay,
Negros Occidental. Speaking for this Court, Mr. Justice Grant T. Trent said:
We are therefore of the
opinion that the weight of authority supports the proposition that the relator
is a proper party to proceedings of this character when a public right is
sought to be enforced. If the general rule in America were otherwise, we think
that it would not be applicable to the case at bar for the reason 'that it is
always dangerous to apply a general rule to a particular case without keeping
in mind the reason for the rule, because, if under the particular circumstances
the reason for the rule does not exist, the rule itself is not applicable and
reliance upon the rule may well lead to error'
No reason exists in the case
at bar for applying the general rule insisted upon by counsel for the
respondent. The circumstances which surround this case are different from those
in the United States, inasmuch as if the relator is not a proper party to these
proceedings no other person could be, as we have seen that it is not the duty
of the law officer of the Government to appear and represent the people in
cases of this character.
The reasons given by the Court
in recognizing a private citizen's legal personality in the aforementioned case
apply squarely to the present petition. Clearly, the right sought to be
enforced by petitioners herein is a public right recognized by no less than the
fundamental law of the land. If petitioners were not allowed to institute this
proceeding, it would indeed be difficult to conceive of any other person to
initiate the same, considering that the Solicitor General, the government
officer generally empowered to represent the people, has entered his appearance
for respondents in this case.
Respondents further contend
that publication in the Official Gazette is not a sine qua non requirement for
the effectivity of laws where the laws themselves provide for their own
effectivity dates. It is thus submitted that since the presidential issuances
in question contain special provisions as to the date they are to take effect,
publication in the Official Gazette is not indispensable for their effectivity.
The point stressed is anchored on Article 2 of the Civil Code:
Art. 2. Laws shall take effect
after fifteen days following the completion of their publication in the
Official Gazette, unless it is otherwise provided, ...
The interpretation given by
respondent is in accord with this Court's construction of said article. In a
long line of decisions, 4 this Court has ruled that publication in
the Official Gazette is necessary in those cases where the legislation itself
does not provide for its effectivity date-for then the date of publication is
material for determining its date of effectivity, which is the fifteenth day
following its publication-but not when the law itself provides for the date
when it goes into effect.
Respondents' argument,
however, is logically correct only insofar as it equates the effectivity of
laws with the fact of publication. Considered in the light of other statutes
applicable to the issue at hand, the conclusion is easily reached that said
Article 2 does not preclude the requirement of publication in the Official
Gazette, even if the law itself provides for the date of its effectivity. Thus,
Section 1 of Commonwealth Act 638 provides as follows:
Section 1. There shall be
published in the Official Gazette [1] all important legisiative acts and
resolutions of a public nature of the, Congress of the Philippines; [2] all
executive and administrative orders and proclamations, except such as have no
general applicability; [3] decisions or abstracts of decisions of the Supreme
Court and the Court of Appeals as may be deemed by said courts of sufficient importance
to be so published; [4] such documents or classes of documents as may be
required so to be published by law; and [5] such documents or classes of
documents as the President of the Philippines shall determine from time to time
to have general applicability and legal effect, or which he may authorize so to
be published. ...
The clear object of the
above-quoted provision is to give the general public adequate notice of the
various laws which are to regulate their actions and conduct as citizens. Without
such notice and publication, there would be no basis for the application of the
maxim "ignorantia legis non excusat." It would be the height of
injustice to punish or otherwise burden a citizen for the transgression of a
law of which he had no notice whatsoever, not even a constructive one.
Perhaps at no time since the
establishment of the Philippine Republic has the publication of laws taken so
vital significance that at this time when the people have bestowed upon the
President a power heretofore enjoyed solely by the legislature. While the
people are kept abreast by the mass media of the debates and deliberations in
the Batasan Pambansa—and for the diligent ones, ready access to the legislative
records—no such publicity accompanies the law-making process of the President.
Thus, without publication, the people have no means of knowing what
presidential decrees have actually been promulgated, much less a definite way
of informing themselves of the specific contents and texts of such decrees. As
the Supreme Court of Spain ruled: "Bajo la denominacion generica de leyes,
se comprenden tambien los reglamentos, Reales decretos, Instrucciones,
Circulares y Reales ordines dictadas de conformidad con las mismas por el
Gobierno en uso de su potestad. 5
The very first clause of
Section I of Commonwealth Act 638 reads: "There shall be published in the
Official Gazette ... ." The word "shall" used therein imposes
upon respondent officials an imperative duty. That duty must be enforced if the
Constitutional right of the people to be informed on matters of public concern
is to be given substance and reality. The law itself makes a list of what
should be published in the Official Gazette. Such listing, to our mind, leaves
respondents with no discretion whatsoever as to what must be included or
excluded from such publication.
The publication of all
presidential issuances "of a public nature" or "of general
applicability" is mandated by law. Obviously, presidential decrees that
provide for fines, forfeitures or penalties for their violation or otherwise
impose a burden or. the people, such as tax and revenue measures, fall within
this category. Other presidential issuances which apply only to particular
persons or class of persons such as administrative and executive orders need
not be published on the assumption that they have been circularized to all
concerned. 6
It is needless to add that the
publication of presidential issuances "of a public nature" or
"of general applicability" is a requirement of due process. It is a
rule of law that before a person may be bound by law, he must first be
officially and specifically informed of its contents. As Justice Claudio
Teehankee said in Peralta vs. COMELEC 7:
In a time of proliferating
decrees, orders and letters of instructions which all form part of the law of
the land, the requirement of due process and the Rule of Law demand that the
Official Gazette as the official government repository promulgate and publish
the texts of all such decrees, orders and instructions so that the people may
know where to obtain their official and specific contents.
The Court therefore declares
that presidential issuances of general application, which have not been
published, shall have no force and effect. Some members of the Court, quite
apprehensive about the possible unsettling effect this decision might have on
acts done in reliance of the validity of those presidential decrees which were
published only during the pendency of this petition, have put the question as
to whether the Court's declaration of invalidity apply to P.D.s which had been
enforced or implemented prior to their publication. The answer is all too
familiar. In similar situations in the past this Court had taken the pragmatic
and realistic course set forth in Chicot County Drainage District vs.
Baxter Bank 8 to wit:
The courts below have
proceeded on the theory that the Act of Congress, having been found to be
unconstitutional, was not a law; that it was inoperative, conferring no rights
and imposing no duties, and hence affording no basis for the challenged decree.
Norton v. Shelby County, 118 U.S. 425, 442; Chicago, 1. & L. Ry. Co. v.
Hackett, 228 U.S. 559, 566. It is quite clear, however, that such broad statements
as to the effect of a determination of unconstitutionality must be taken with
qualifications. The actual existence of a statute, prior to such a
determination, is an operative fact and may have consequences which cannot
justly be ignored. The past cannot always be erased by a new judicial
declaration. The effect of the subsequent ruling as to invalidity may have to
be considered in various aspects-with respect to particular conduct, private
and official. Questions of rights claimed to have become vested, of status, of
prior determinations deemed to have finality and acted upon accordingly, of
public policy in the light of the nature both of the statute and of its
previous application, demand examination. These questions are among the most
difficult of those which have engaged the attention of courts, state and
federal and it is manifest from numerous decisions that an all-inclusive
statement of a principle of absolute retroactive invalidity cannot be
justified.
Consistently with the above
principle, this Court in Rutter vs. Esteban 9 sustained the
right of a party under the Moratorium Law, albeit said right had accrued in his
favor before said law was declared unconstitutional by this Court.
Similarly, the
implementation/enforcement of presidential decrees prior to their publication
in the Official Gazette is "an operative fact which may have consequences
which cannot be justly ignored. The past cannot always be erased by a new
judicial declaration ... that an all-inclusive statement of a principle of absolute
retroactive invalidity cannot be justified."
From the report submitted to
the Court by the Clerk of Court, it appears that of the presidential decrees
sought by petitioners to be published in the Official Gazette, only
Presidential Decrees Nos. 1019 to 1030, inclusive, 1278, and 1937 to 1939,
inclusive, have not been so published. 10 Neither the subject matters
nor the texts of these PDs can be ascertained since no copies thereof are
available. But whatever their subject matter may be, it is undisputed that none
of these unpublished PDs has ever been implemented or enforced by the
government. InPesigan vs. Angeles, 11 the Court, through Justice
Ramon Aquino, ruled that "publication is necessary to apprise the public
of the contents of [penal] regulations and make the said penalties binding on
the persons affected thereby. " The cogency of this holding is apparently
recognized by respondent officials considering the manifestation in their
comment that "the government, as a matter of policy, refrains from
prosecuting violations of criminal laws until the same shall have been
published in the Official Gazette or in some other publication, even though
some criminal laws provide that they shall take effect immediately.
WHEREFORE, the Court hereby
orders respondents to publish in the Official Gazette all unpublished
presidential issuances which are of general application, and unless so
published, they shall have no binding force and effect.
SO ORDERED.
Relova, J., concurs.
Aquino, J., took no part.
Concepcion, Jr., J., is on
leave.
Separate Opinions
FERNANDO, C.J., concurring
(with qualification):
There is on the whole
acceptance on my part of the views expressed in the ably written opinion of
Justice Escolin. I am unable, however, to concur insofar as it would
unqualifiedly impose the requirement of publication in the Official Gazette for
unpublished "presidential issuances" to have binding force and
effect.
I shall explain why.
1. It is of course true that
without the requisite publication, a due process question would arise if made
to apply adversely to a party who is not even aware of the existence of any
legislative or executive act having the force and effect of law. My point is
that such publication required need not be confined to the Official Gazette.
From the pragmatic standpoint, there is an advantage to be gained. It conduces
to certainty. That is too be admitted. It does not follow, however, that
failure to do so would in all cases and under all circumstances result in a
statute, presidential decree or any other executive act of the same category
being bereft of any binding force and effect. To so hold would, for me, raise a
constitutional question. Such a pronouncement would lend itself to the
interpretation that such a legislative or presidential act is bereft of the
attribute of effectivity unless published in the Official Gazette. There is no
such requirement in the Constitution as Justice Plana so aptly pointed out. It
is true that what is decided now applies only to past "presidential issuances".
Nonetheless, this clarification is, to my mind, needed to avoid any possible
misconception as to what is required for any statute or presidential act to be
impressed with binding force or effectivity.
2. It is quite understandable
then why I concur in the separate opinion of Justice Plana. Its first paragraph
sets forth what to me is the constitutional doctrine applicable to this case.
Thus: "The Philippine Constitution does not require the publication of
laws as a prerequisite for their effectivity, unlike some Constitutions
elsewhere. It may be said though that the guarantee of due process requires
notice of laws to affected Parties before they can be bound thereby; but such
notice is not necessarily by publication in the Official Gazette. The due
process clause is not that precise. 1 I am likewise in agreement with
its closing paragraph: "In fine, I concur in the majority decision to the
extent that it requires notice before laws become effective, for no person
should be bound by a law without notice. This is elementary fairness. However,
I beg to disagree insofar as it holds that such notice shall be by publication
in the Official Gazette. 2
3. It suffices, as was stated
by Judge Learned Hand, that law as the command of the government "must be
ascertainable in some form if it is to be enforced at all. 3 It would
indeed be to reduce it to the level of mere futility, as pointed out by Justice
Cardozo, "if it is unknown and unknowable. 4 Publication, to
repeat, is thus essential. What I am not prepared to subscribe to is the
doctrine that it must be in the Official Gazette. To be sure once published
therein there is the ascertainable mode of determining the exact date of its
effectivity. Still for me that does not dispose of the question of what is the
jural effect of past presidential decrees or executive acts not so published.
For prior thereto, it could be that parties aware of their existence could have
conducted themselves in accordance with their provisions. If no legal
consequences could attach due to lack of publication in the Official Gazette,
then serious problems could arise. Previous transactions based on such
"Presidential Issuances" could be open to question. Matters deemed
settled could still be inquired into. I am not prepared to hold that such an
effect is contemplated by our decision. Where such presidential decree or
executive act is made the basis of a criminal prosecution, then, of course, its
ex post facto character becomes evident. 5 In civil cases though,
retroactivity as such is not conclusive on the due process aspect. There must
still be a showing of arbitrariness. Moreover, where the challenged
presidential decree or executive act was issued under the police power, the
non-impairment clause of the Constitution may not always be successfully
invoked. There must still be that process of balancing to determine whether or
not it could in such a case be tainted by infirmity. 6 In traditional
terminology, there could arise then a question of unconstitutional application.
That is as far as it goes.
4. Let me make therefore that
my qualified concurrence goes no further than to affirm that publication is
essential to the effectivity of a legislative or executive act of a general
application. I am not in agreement with the view that such publication must be
in the Official Gazette. The Civil Code itself in its Article 2 expressly
recognizes that the rule as to laws taking effect after fifteen days following
the completion of their publication in the Official Gazette is subject to this
exception, "unless it is otherwise provided." Moreover, the Civil
Code is itself only a legislative enactment, Republic Act No. 386. It does not
and cannot have the juridical force of a constitutional command. A later
legislative or executive act which has the force and effect of law can legally
provide for a different rule.
5. Nor can I agree with the
rather sweeping conclusion in the opinion of Justice Escolin that presidential
decrees and executive acts not thus previously published in the Official
Gazette would be devoid of any legal character. That would be, in my opinion,
to go too far. It may be fraught, as earlier noted, with undesirable
consequences. I find myself therefore unable to yield assent to such a
pronouncement.
I am authorized to state that
Justices Makasiar, Abad Santos, Cuevas, and Alampay concur in this separate
opinion.
Makasiar, Abad Santos, Cuevas
and Alampay, JJ., concur.
TEEHANKEE, J., concurring:
I concur with the main opinion
of Mr. Justice Escolin and the concurring opinion of Mme. Justice Herrera. The
Rule of Law connotes a body of norms and laws published and ascertainable and
of equal application to all similarly circumstances and not subject to
arbitrary change but only under certain set procedures. The Court has
consistently stressed that "it is an elementary rule of fair play and
justice that a reasonable opportunity to be informed must be afforded to the
people who are commanded to obey before they can be punished for its violation, 1 citing
the settled principle based on due process enunciated in earlier cases that
"before the public is bound by its contents, especially its penal
provisions, a law, regulation or circular must first be published and the
people officially and specially informed of said contents and its penalties.
Without official publication
in the Official Gazette as required by Article 2 of the Civil Code and the
Revised Administrative Code, there would be no basis nor justification for the
corollary rule of Article 3 of the Civil Code (based on constructive notice
that the provisions of the law are ascertainable from the public and official
repository where they are duly published) that "Ignorance of the law
excuses no one from compliance therewith.
Respondents' contention based
on a misreading of Article 2 of the Civil Code that "only laws which are
silent as to their effectivity [date] need be published in the Official Gazette
for their effectivity" is manifestly untenable. The plain text and meaning
of the Civil Code is that "laws shall take effect after fifteen days
following the completion of their publication in the Official Gazette, unless
it is otherwise provided, " i.e. a different effectivity date is
provided by the law itself. This proviso perforce refers to a law that has been
duly published pursuant to the basic constitutional requirements of due
process. The best example of this is the Civil Code itself: the same Article 2
provides otherwise that it "shall take effect [only] one year [not 15
days] after such publication. 2 To sustain respondents' misreading
that "most laws or decrees specify the date of their effectivity and for
this reason, publication in the Official Gazette is not necessary for their
effectivity 3 would be to nullify and render nugatory the Civil
Code's indispensable and essential requirement of prior publication in the
Official Gazette by the simple expedient of providing for immediate effectivity
or an earlier effectivity date in the law itself before the
completion of 15 days following its publication which is the period generally
fixed by the Civil Code for its proper dissemination.
MELENCIO-HERRERA, J., concurring:
I agree. There cannot be any
question but that even if a decree provides for a date of effectivity, it has
to be published. What I would like to state in connection with that proposition
is that when a date of effectivity is mentioned in the decree but the decree
becomes effective only fifteen (15) days after its publication in the Official
Gazette, it will not mean that the decree can have retroactive effect to the
date of effectivity mentioned in the decree itself. There should be no
retroactivity if the retroactivity will run counter to constitutional rights or
shall destroy vested rights.
PLANA, J., concurring
(with qualification):
The Philippine Constitution
does not require the publication of laws as a prerequisite for their
effectivity, unlike some Constitutions elsewhere. * It may be said
though that the guarantee of due process requires notice of laws to affected
parties before they can be bound thereby; but such notice is not necessarily by
publication in the Official Gazette. The due process clause is not that
precise. Neither is the publication of laws in the Official Gazetterequired
by any statute as a prerequisite for their effectivity, if said laws
already provide for their effectivity date.
Article 2 of the Civil Code
provides that "laws shall take effect after fifteen days following the
completion of their publication in the Official Gazette, unless it is
otherwise provided " Two things may be said of this provision:
Firstly, it obviously does not apply to a law with a built-in provision as to
when it will take effect. Secondly, it clearly recognizes that each law may
provide not only a different period for reckoning its effectivity date but also
a different mode of notice. Thus, a law may prescribe that it shall be
published elsewhere than in the Official Gazette.
Commonwealth Act No. 638, in
my opinion, does not support the proposition that for their
effectivity, laws must be published in the Official Gazette. The said law
is simply "An Act to Provide for the Uniform Publication and Distribution
of the Official Gazette." Conformably therewith, it authorizes the
publication of the Official Gazette, determines its frequency, provides for its
sale and distribution, and defines the authority of the Director of Printing in
relation thereto. It also enumerates what shall be published in the Official
Gazette, among them, "important legislative acts and resolutions of a
public nature of the Congress of the Philippines" and "all executive
and administrative orders and proclamations, except such as have no general
applicability." It is noteworthy that not all legislative acts are required
to be published in the Official Gazette but only "important" ones
"of a public nature." Moreover, the said law does not provide that
publication in the Official Gazette is essential for the effectivity of laws.
This is as it should be, for all statutes are equal and stand on the same
footing. A law, especially an earlier one of general application such as
Commonwealth Act No. 638, cannot nullify or restrict the operation of a
subsequent statute that has a provision of its own as to when and how it will
take effect. Only a higher law, which is the Constitution, can assume that
role.
In fine, I concur in the
majority decision to the extent that it requires notice before laws become
effective, for no person should be bound by a law without notice. This is
elementary fairness. However, I beg to disagree insofar as it holds that such
notice shall be by publication in the Official Gazette.
Cuevas and Alampay, JJ.,
concur.
GUTIERREZ, Jr., J., concurring:
I concur insofar as
publication is necessary but reserve my vote as to the necessity of such
publication being in the Official Gazette.
DE LA FUENTE, J., concurring:
I concur insofar as the
opinion declares the unpublished decrees and issuances of a public nature or
general applicability ineffective, until due publication thereof.
Separate Opinions
FERNANDO, C.J., concurring
(with qualification):
There is on the whole
acceptance on my part of the views expressed in the ably written opinion of
Justice Escolin. I am unable, however, to concur insofar as it would
unqualifiedly impose the requirement of publication in the Official Gazette for
unpublished "presidential issuances" to have binding force and
effect.
I shall explain why.
1. It is of course true that
without the requisite publication, a due process question would arise if made
to apply adversely to a party who is not even aware of the existence of any
legislative or executive act having the force and effect of law. My point is
that such publication required need not be confined to the Official Gazette.
From the pragmatic standpoint, there is an advantage to be gained. It conduces
to certainty. That is too be admitted. It does not follow, however, that
failure to do so would in all cases and under all circumstances result in a
statute, presidential decree or any other executive act of the same category
being bereft of any binding force and effect. To so hold would, for me, raise a
constitutional question. Such a pronouncement would lend itself to the
interpretation that such a legislative or presidential act is bereft of the
attribute of effectivity unless published in the Official Gazette. There is no
such requirement in the Constitution as Justice Plana so aptly pointed out. It
is true that what is decided now applies only to past "presidential
issuances". Nonetheless, this clarification is, to my mind, needed to
avoid any possible misconception as to what is required for any statute or
presidential act to be impressed with binding force or effectivity.
2. It is quite understandable
then why I concur in the separate opinion of Justice Plana. Its first paragraph
sets forth what to me is the constitutional doctrine applicable to this case.
Thus: "The Philippine Constitution does not require the publication of
laws as a prerequisite for their effectivity, unlike some Constitutions
elsewhere. It may be said though that the guarantee of due process requires
notice of laws to affected Parties before they can be bound thereby; but such
notice is not necessarily by publication in the Official Gazette. The due
process clause is not that precise. 1 I am likewise in agreement with
its closing paragraph: "In fine, I concur in the majority decision to the
extent that it requires notice before laws become effective, for no person
should be bound by a law without notice. This is elementary fairness. However,
I beg to disagree insofar as it holds that such notice shall be by publication
in the Official Gazette. 2
3. It suffices, as was stated
by Judge Learned Hand, that law as the command of the government "must be
ascertainable in some form if it is to be enforced at all. 3 It would
indeed be to reduce it to the level of mere futility, as pointed out by Justice
Cardozo, "if it is unknown and unknowable. 4 Publication, to
repeat, is thus essential. What I am not prepared to subscribe to is the
doctrine that it must be in the Official Gazette. To be sure once published
therein there is the ascertainable mode of determining the exact date of its
effectivity. Still for me that does not dispose of the question of what is the
jural effect of past presidential decrees or executive acts not so published.
For prior thereto, it could be that parties aware of their existence could have
conducted themselves in accordance with their provisions. If no legal
consequences could attach due to lack of publication in the Official Gazette,
then serious problems could arise. Previous transactions based on such
"Presidential Issuances" could be open to question. Matters deemed
settled could still be inquired into. I am not prepared to hold that such an
effect is contemplated by our decision. Where such presidential decree or executive
act is made the basis of a criminal prosecution, then, of course, its ex post
facto character becomes evident. 5 In civil cases though,
retroactivity as such is not conclusive on the due process aspect. There must
still be a showing of arbitrariness. Moreover, where the challenged
presidential decree or executive act was issued under the police power, the
non-impairment clause of the Constitution may not always be successfully
invoked. There must still be that process of balancing to determine whether or
not it could in such a case be tainted by infirmity. 6 In traditional
terminology, there could arise then a question of unconstitutional application.
That is as far as it goes.
4. Let me make therefore that
my qualified concurrence goes no further than to affirm that publication is
essential to the effectivity of a legislative or executive act of a general
application. I am not in agreement with the view that such publication must be
in the Official Gazette. The Civil Code itself in its Article 2 expressly recognizes
that the rule as to laws taking effect after fifteen days following the
completion of their publication in the Official Gazette is subject to this
exception, "unless it is otherwise provided." Moreover, the Civil
Code is itself only a legislative enactment, Republic Act No. 386. It does not
and cannot have the juridical force of a constitutional command. A later
legislative or executive act which has the force and effect of law can legally
provide for a different rule.
5. Nor can I agree with the
rather sweeping conclusion in the opinion of Justice Escolin that presidential
decrees and executive acts not thus previously published in the Official
Gazette would be devoid of any legal character. That would be, in my opinion,
to go too far. It may be fraught, as earlier noted, with undesirable
consequences. I find myself therefore unable to yield assent to such a
pronouncement.
I am authorized to state that
Justices Makasiar, Abad Santos, Cuevas, and Alampay concur in this separate
opinion.
Makasiar, Abad Santos, Cuevas
and Alampay, JJ., concur.
TEEHANKEE, J., concurring:
I concur with the main opinion
of Mr. Justice Escolin and the concurring opinion of Mme. Justice Herrera. The
Rule of Law connotes a body of norms and laws published and ascertainable and of
equal application to all similarly circumstances and not subject to arbitrary
change but only under certain set procedures. The Court has consistently
stressed that "it is an elementary rule of fair play and justice that a
reasonable opportunity to be informed must be afforded to the people who are
commanded to obey before they can be punished for its violation, 1 citing
the settled principle based on due process enunciated in earlier cases that
"before the public is bound by its contents, especially its penal
provisions, a law, regulation or circular must first be published and the
people officially and specially informed of said contents and its penalties.
Without official publication
in the Official Gazette as required by Article 2 of the Civil Code and the
Revised Administrative Code, there would be no basis nor justification for the
corollary rule of Article 3 of the Civil Code (based on constructive notice
that the provisions of the law are ascertainable from the public and official
repository where they are duly published) that "Ignorance of the law
excuses no one from compliance therewith.
Respondents' contention based
on a misreading of Article 2 of the Civil Code that "only laws which are
silent as to their effectivity [date] need be published in the Official Gazette
for their effectivity" is manifestly untenable. The plain text and meaning
of the Civil Code is that "laws shall take effect after fifteen days
following the completion of their publication in the Official Gazette, unless
it is otherwise provided, " i.e. a different effectivity date is
provided by the law itself. This proviso perforce refers to a law that has been
duly published pursuant to the basic constitutional requirements of due
process. The best example of this is the Civil Code itself: the same Article 2
provides otherwise that it "shall take effect [only] one year [not 15
days] after such publication. 2 To sustain respondents' misreading
that "most laws or decrees specify the date of their effectivity and for
this reason, publication in the Official Gazette is not necessary for their
effectivity 3 would be to nullify and render nugatory the Civil
Code's indispensable and essential requirement of prior publication in the
Official Gazette by the simple expedient of providing for immediate effectivity
or an earlier effectivity date in the law itself before the
completion of 15 days following its publication which is the period generally
fixed by the Civil Code for its proper dissemination.
MELENCIO-HERRERA, J., concurring:
I agree. There cannot be any
question but that even if a decree provides for a date of effectivity, it has
to be published. What I would like to state in connection with that proposition
is that when a date of effectivity is mentioned in the decree but the decree becomes
effective only fifteen (15) days after its publication in the Official Gazette,
it will not mean that the decree can have retroactive effect to the date of
effectivity mentioned in the decree itself. There should be no retroactivity if
the retroactivity will run counter to constitutional rights or shall destroy
vested rights.
PLANA, J., concurring
(with qualification):
The Philippine Constitution
does not require the publication of laws as a prerequisite for their
effectivity, unlike some Constitutions elsewhere. * It may be said
though that the guarantee of due process requires notice of laws to affected
parties before they can be bound thereby; but such notice is not necessarily by
publication in the Official Gazette. The due process clause is not that precise.
Neither is the publication of laws in the Official Gazetterequired by any
statute as a prerequisite for their effectivity, if said laws already
provide for their effectivity date.
Article 2 of the Civil Code
provides that "laws shall take effect after fifteen days following the
completion of their publication in the Official Gazette, unless it is
otherwise provided " Two things may be said of this provision:
Firstly, it obviously does not apply to a law with a built-in provision as to
when it will take effect. Secondly, it clearly recognizes that each law may
provide not only a different period for reckoning its effectivity date but also
a different mode of notice. Thus, a law may prescribe that it shall be
published elsewhere than in the Official Gazette.
Commonwealth Act No. 638, in
my opinion, does not support the proposition that for their
effectivity, laws must be published in the Official Gazette. The said law
is simply "An Act to Provide for the Uniform Publication and Distribution
of the Official Gazette." Conformably therewith, it authorizes the
publication of the Official Gazette, determines its frequency, provides for its
sale and distribution, and defines the authority of the Director of Printing in
relation thereto. It also enumerates what shall be published in the Official
Gazette, among them, "important legislative acts and resolutions of a
public nature of the Congress of the Philippines" and "all executive
and administrative orders and proclamations, except such as have no general
applicability." It is noteworthy that not all legislative acts are
required to be published in the Official Gazette but only "important"
ones "of a public nature." Moreover, the said law does not provide
that publication in the Official Gazette is essential for the effectivity of
laws. This is as it should be, for all statutes are equal and stand on the same
footing. A law, especially an earlier one of general application such as
Commonwealth Act No. 638, cannot nullify or restrict the operation of a
subsequent statute that has a provision of its own as to when and how it will
take effect. Only a higher law, which is the Constitution, can assume that
role.
In fine, I concur in the
majority decision to the extent that it requires notice before laws become
effective, for no person should be bound by a law without notice. This is
elementary fairness. However, I beg to disagree insofar as it holds that such
notice shall be by publication in the Official Gazette.
Cuevas and Alampay, JJ.,
concur.
GUTIERREZ, Jr., J., concurring:
I concur insofar as
publication is necessary but reserve my vote as to the necessity of such
publication being in the Official Gazette.
DE LA FUENTE, J., concurring:
I concur insofar as the
opinion declares the unpublished decrees and issuances of a public nature or
general applicability ineffective, until due publication thereof.
Footnotes
1 Section 6. The right of the
people to information on matters of public concern shag be recognized, access
to official records, and to documents and papers pertaining to official acts,
transactions, or decisions, shag be afforded the citizens subject to such
limitation as may be provided by law.
2 Anti-Chinese League vs.
Felix, 77 Phil. 1012; Costas vs. Aidanese, 45 Phil. 345; Almario vs. City
Mayor, 16 SCRA 151;Parting vs. San Jose Petroleum, 18 SCRA 924; Dumlao vs.
Comelec, 95 SCRA 392.
3 16 Phil. 366, 378.
4 Camacho vs. Court of
Industrial Relations, 80 Phil 848; Mejia vs. Balolong, 81 Phil. 486; Republic
of the Philippines vs. Encamacion, 87 Phil. 843; Philippine Blooming Mills,
Inc. vs. Social Security System, 17 SCRA 1077; Askay vs. Cosalan, 46 Phil. 179.
5 1 Manresa, Codigo Civil 7th
Ed., p. 146.
6 People vs. Que Po Lay, 94
Phil. 640; Balbuena et al. vs. Secretary of Education, et al., 110 Phil. 150.
7 82 SCRA 30, dissenting
opinion.
8 308 U.S. 371, 374.
9 93 Phil.. 68,.
10 The report was prepared by
the Clerk of Court after Acting Director Florendo S. Pablo Jr. of the
Government Printing Office, failed to respond to her letter-request regarding
the respective dates of publication in the Official Gazette of the presidential
issuances listed therein. No report has been submitted by the Clerk of Court as
to the publication or non-publication of other presidential issuances.
11 129 SCRA 174.
Fernando, CJ.:
1 Separate Opinion of Justice
Plana, first paragraph. He mentioned in tills connection Article 7, Sec. 21 of
the Wisconsin Constitution and State ex rel. White v. Grand Superior Ct., 71
ALR 1354, citing the Constitution of Indiana, U.S.A
2 Ibid, closing paragraph.
3 Learned Hand, The Spirit of
Liberty 104 (1960).
4 Cardozo, The Growth of the
Law, 3 (1924).
5 Cf. Nunez v. Sandiganbayan,
G.R. No. 50581-50617, January 30, 1982, 111 SCRA 433.
6 Cf. Alalayan v. National
Power Corporation, L-24396, July 29, 1968, 24 SCRA 172.
Teehankee, J.:
1 People vs. de Dios, G.R. No.
11003, Aug. 3l, 1959, per the late Chief Justice Paras.
2 Notes in brackets supplied.
3 Respondents: comment, pp.
14-15.
Plana, J.:
* See e.g., Wisconsin
Constitution, Art. 7, Sec. 21: "The legislature shall provide publication
of all statute laws ... and no general law shall be in force until
published." See also S ate ex rel. White vs. Grand Superior Ct., 71 ALR
1354, citing Constitution of Indiana, U.S.A.
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