Garcillano vs. House of Representatives, G.R. No. 170338, December 23, 2008
FACTS:
More than three
years ago, tapes ostensibly containing a wiretapped conversation purportedly
between the President of the Philippines and a high-ranking official of COMELEC
surfaced.
The tapes,
notoriously referred to as the "Hello Garci" tapes, allegedly
contained the President’s instructions to COMELEC Commissioner Virgilio
Garcillano to manipulate in her favor results of the 2004 presidential
elections. These recordings were to become the subject of heated legislative
hearings conducted separately by committees of both Houses of Congress.
On September 6,
2007, petitioners Santiago Ranada and Oswaldo Agcaoili, retired justices of the
Court of Appeals, filed before this Court a Petition for Prohibition with
Prayer for the Issuance of a Temporary Restraining Order and/or Writ of
Preliminary Injunction, docketed as G.R. No. 179275, seeking to bar the Senate
from conducting its scheduled legislative inquiry. They argued in the main that
the intended legislative inquiry violates R.A. No. 4200 and Section 3, Article
III of the Constitution.
The respondents
admit in their pleadings and even on oral argument that the Senate Rules of
Procedure Governing Inquiries in Aid of Legislation had been published in
newspapers of general circulation only in 1995 and in 2006. With respect to the
present Senate of the 14th Congress, however, of which the term of half of its
members commenced on June 30, 2007, no effort was undertaken for the
publication of these rules when they first opened their session.
ISSUE:
Whether or not Senate
Rules of Procedure Governing Inquiries in Aid of Legislation needs to be
published
RULING:
The Senate cannot
be allowed to continue with the conduct of the questioned legislative inquiry
without duly published rules of procedure, in clear derogation of the
constitutional requirement.
Section 21,
Article VI of the 1987 Constitution explicitly provides that "the Senate
or the House of Representatives, or any of its respective committees may
conduct inquiries in aid of legislation in accordance with its duly published
rules of procedure." The requisite of publication of the rules is intended
to satisfy the basic requirements of due process. Publication is indeed
imperative, for it will be the height of injustice to punish or otherwise
burden a citizen for the transgression of a law or rule of which he had no
notice whatsoever, not even a constructive one. What constitutes publication is
set forth in Article 2 of the Civil Code, which provides that "laws shall
take effect after 15 days following the completion of their publication either
in the Official Gazette, or in a newspaper of general circulation in the
Philippines."
In Neri v. Senate
Committee on Accountability of Public Officers and Investigations,the Court
said:
The phrase "duly published rules of
procedure" requires the Senate of every Congress to publish its rules of
procedure governing inquiries in aid of legislation because every Senate is
distinct from the one before it or after it. Since Senatorial elections are
held every 3 years for one-half of the Senate’s membership, the composition of
the Senate also changes by the end of each term. Each Senate may thus enact a
different set of rules as it may deem fit. Not having published its Rules of
Procedure, the subject hearings in aid of legislation conducted by the 14th
Senate, are therefore, procedurally infirm.
Respondents
justify their non-observance of the constitutionally mandated publication by
arguing that the rules have never been amended since 1995 and, despite that,
they are published in booklet form available to anyone for free, and accessible
to the public at the Senate’s internet web page.
The Court does not
agree. The absence of any amendment to the rules cannot justify the Senate’s
defiance of the clear and unambiguous language of Section 21, Article VI of the
Constitution. The organic law instructs, without more, that the Senate or its
committees may conduct inquiries in aid of legislation only in accordance with
duly published rules of procedure, and does not make any distinction whether or
not these rules have undergone amendments or revision. The constitutional
mandate to publish the said rules prevails over any custom, practice or
tradition followed by the Senate.
The respondent
Senate Committees, therefore, could not, in violation of the Constitution, use
its unpublished rules in the legislative inquiry subject of these consolidated
cases. The conduct of inquiries in aid of legislation by the Senate has to be
deferred until it shall have caused the publication of the rules, because it
can do so only "in accordance with its duly published rules of
procedure."
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