833 Phil. 449

EN BANC

[ G.R. No. 237428, June 19, 2018 ]

REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES, REPRESENTED BY SOLICITOR GENERAL JOSE C. CALIDA, PETITIONER, VS. MARIA LOURDES P. A. SERENO, RESPONDENT.

RESOLUTION

TIJAM, J.:

This resolution treats of the following motions:
  1. Maria Lourdes P. A. Sereno's (respondent) Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration of this Court's Decision[1] dated May 11, 2018, the dispositive portion of which states:
    WHEREFORE, the Petition for Quo Warranto is GRANTED. Respondent Maria Lourdes P. A. Sereno is found DISQUALIFIED from and is hereby adjudged GUILTY of UNLAWFULLY HOLDING and EXERCISING the OFFICE OF THE CHIEF JUSTICE. Accordingly, Respondent Maria Lourdes P. A. Sereno is OUSTED and EXCLUDED therefrom.

    The position of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court is declared vacant and the Judicial and Bar Council is directed to commence the application and nomination process.

    This Decision is immediately executory without need of further action from the Court.

    Respondent Maria Lourdes P. A. Sereno is ordered to SHOW CAUSE within ten (10) days from receipt hereof why she should not be sanctioned for violating the Code of Professional Responsibility and the Code of Judicial Conduct for transgressing the sub judice rule and for casting aspersions and ill motives to the Members of the Supreme Court.

    SO ORDERED.[2]
  2. Respondent's Ad Cautelam Motion for Extension of Time to File Reply (to the Show Cause Order dated 11 May 2018).
We first dispose of respondent's Motion for Reconsideration.

Respondent claims denial of due process because her case was allegedly not heard by an impartial tribunal. She reiterates that the six (6) Justices ought to have inhibited themselves on the grounds of actual.bias, of having personal knowledge of disputed evidentiary facts, and of having acted as a material witness in the matter in controversy. Respondent also argues denial of due process when the Court supposedly took notice of extraneous matters as corroborative evidence and when the Court based its main Decision on facts without observing the mandatory procedure for reception of evidence.

She reiterates her arguments that the Court is without jurisdiction to oust an impeachable officer through quo warranto; that the official acts of the Judicial and Bar Council (JBC) and the President involves political questions that cannot be annulled absent any allegation of grave abuse of discretion; that the petition for quo warranto is time-barred; and that respondent was and is a person of proven integrity.

By way of Comment, the Republic of the Philippines (Republic), through the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG), seeks a denial of respondent's motion for reconsideration tor being pro forma. In any case, the OSG argues that respondent's motion lacks merit as there was no denial of due process and that quo warranto is the appropriate remedy to oust an ineligible impeachable officer. The OSG adds that the issue of whether respondent is a person of proven integrity is justiciable considering that the decision-making powers of the JBC are limited by judicially discoverable standards. Undeviating from its position, the OSG maintains that the petition is not time-barred as Section II, Rule 66 of the Rules of Court does not apply to the State and that the peculiar circumstances of the instant case preclude the strict application of the prescriptive period.

Disputing respondent's claims, the OSG reiterates that respondent's repeated failure to file her Statement of Assets, Liabilities and Net Worth (SALN) and her non-submission thereof to the JBC which the latter required to prove the integrity of an applicant affect respondent's integrity. The OSG concludes that respondent, not having possessed of proven integrity, failed to meet the constitutional requirement for appointment to the Judiciary.

Carefully weighing the arguments advanced by both parties, this Court finds no reason to reverse its earlier Decision.

I

Respondent is seriously in error for claiming denial of due process. Respondent refuses to recognize the Court's jurisdiction over the subject matter and over her person on the ground that respondent, as a purported impeachable official, can only be removed exclusively by impeachment. Reiterating this argument, respondent filed her Comment to the Petition, moved that her case be heard on Oral Argument, filed her Memorandum, filed her Reply/Supplement to the OSG's Memorandum and now, presently moves for reconsideration. All these representations were made ad cautelam which, stripped of its legal parlance, simply means that she asks to be heard by the Court which jurisdiction she does not acknowledge. She asked relief from the Court and was in fact heard by the Court, and yet she claims to have been denied of due process. She repeatedly discussed the supposed merits of her opposition to the present quo warranto petition in various social and traditional media, and yet she claims denial of due process. The preposterousness of her claim deserves scant consideration.

Respondent also harps on the alleged bias on the part of the six (6) Justices and that supposedly, their failure to inhibit themselves from deciding the instant petition amounts to a denial of due process.

Respondent's contentions were merely a rehash of the issues already taken into consideration and properly resolved by the Court. To reiterate, mere imputation of bias or partiality is not enough ground for inhibition, especially when the charge is without basis. Acts or conduct clearly indicative of arbitrariness or prejudice has to be shown.[3] Verily, for bias and prejudice to be considered sufficient justification for the inhibition of a Member of this Court, mere suspicion is not enough.

Moreover, as discussed in the main Decision, respondent's allegations on the grounds for inhibition were merely based on speculations, or on distortions of the language, context and meaning of the answers given by the concerned Justices as resource persons in the proceedings of the Committee on Justice of the House of Representatives. These matters were squarely resolved by the Court in its main Decision, as well as in the respective separate opinions of the Justices involved.

Indeed, the Members of the Court's right to inhibit are weighed against their duty to adjudicate the case without fear of repression. Respondent's motion to require the inhibition of Justices Teresita J. Leonardo-De Castro, Lucas P. Bersamin, Diosdado M. Peralta, Francis H. Jardeleza, Samuel R. Martires, and Noel Gimenez Tijam, who all concurred to the main Decision, would open the floodgates to the worst kind of forum shopping, and on its face, would allow respondent to shop for a Member of the Court who she perceives to be more compassionate and friendly to her cause, and is clearly antithetical to the fair administration of justice.

Bordering on the absurd, respondent alleges prejudice based on the footnotes of the main Decision which show that the draft thereof was being prepared as early as March 15, 2018 when respondent has yet to file her Comment. Respondent forgets to mention that the Petition itself was filed on March 5, 2018 where the propriety of the remedy of quo warranto was specifically raised. Certainly, there is nothing irregular nor suspicious for the Member-in-Charge, nor for any of the Justices for that matter, to have made a requisite initial determination on the matter of jurisdiction. In professing such argument, respondent imputes fault on the part of the Justices for having been diligent in the performance of their work.

Respondent also considers as irregular the query made by the Member-in-Charge with the JBC Office of the Executive Officer (OEO) headed by Atty. Annaliza S. Ty-Capacite (Atty. Capacite). Respondent points out that the same is not allowed and shows prejudice on the part of the Court.

For respondent's information, the data were gathered pursuant to the Court En Banc's Resolution dated March 20, 2018 wherein the Clerk of Court En Banc and the JBC, as custodian and repositories of the documents submitted by respondent, were directed to provide the Court with documents pertinent to respondent's application and appointment as an Associate Justice in 2010 and as Chief Justice of the Court in 2012 for the purpose of arriving at a judicious, complete, and efficient resolution of the instant case. In the same manner, the "corroborative evidence" referred to by respondent simply refers to respondent's acts and representations ascertainable through an examination of the documentary evidence appended by both parties to their respective pleadings as well as their representations during the Oral Argument. Reference to respondent's subsequent acts committed during her incumbency as Chief Justice, on the other hand, are plainly matters of public record and already determined by the House of Representatives as constituting probable cause for impeachment.

II

The Court reaffirms its authority to decide the instant quo warranto action. This authority is expressly conferred on the Supreme Court by the Constitution under Section 5, Article VIII which states that:
Sec. 5. The Supreme Court shall have the following powers:
  1. Exercise original jurisdiction over cases affecting ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls, and over petitions for certiorari, prohibition, mandamus, quo warranto, and habeas corpus.
x x x x (Emphasis ours)
Section 5 of Article VIII does not limit the Court's quo warranto jurisdiction only to certain public officials or that excludes impeachable officials therefrom. In Sarmiento v. Mison,[4] the Court ruled:
The task of the Court is rendered lighter by the existence of relatively clear provisions in the Constitution. In cases like this, we follow what the Court, speaking through Mr. Justice (later, Chief Justice) Jose Abad Santos stated in Gold Creek Mining Corp. v. Rodriguez, that:
The fundamental principle of constitutional construction is to give effect to the intent of the framers of the organic law and of the people adopting it. The intention to which force is to be given is that which is embodied and expressed in the constitutional provisions themselves.[5] (Emphasis ours)
The Constitution defines judicial power as a "duty" to be performed by the courts of justice.[6] Thus, for the Court to repudiate its own jurisdiction over this case would be to abdicate a constitutionally imposed responsibility.

As the Court pointed out in its Decision, this is not the first time the Court took cognizance of a quo warranto petition against an impeachable officer. In the consolidated cases of Estrada v. Macapagal-Arroyo[7] and Estrada v. Desierto,[8] the Court assumed jurisdiction over a quo warranto petition that challenged Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo's title to the presidency.

Arguing that the aforesaid cases cannot serve as precedent for the Court to take cognizance of this case, respondent makes it appear that they involved a totally different issue, one that concerned Joseph E. Estrada's immunity from suit, specifically: "Whether conviction in the impeachment proceedings is a condition precedent for the criminal prosecution of petitioner Estrada. In the negative and on the assumption that petitioner is still President, whether he is immune from criminal prosecution."[9]

Respondent's allegation is utterly false and misleading. A cursory reading of the cases will reveal that Estrada's immunity from suit was just one of the issues raised therein. Estrada in fact sought a quo warranto inquiry into Macapagal-Arroyo's right to assume the presidency, claiming he was simply a President on leave.

Respondent also asserts that Estrada cannot serve as precedent for the Court to decide this case because it was dismissed, and unlike the instant petition, it was filed within the prescribed one (1)-year period under Section 11, Rule 66 of the Rules of Court.[10]

The argument fails to persuade. Estrada was dismissed not because the Court had no jurisdiction over the quo warranto petition but because Estrada's challenge to Macapagal-Arroyo's presidency had no merit. In ruling upon the merits of Estrada's quo warranto petition, the Court has undeniably exercised its jurisdiction under Section 5(1) of Article VIII. Thus, Estrada clearly demonstrates that the Court's quo warranto jurisdiction extends to impeachable officers.

Furthermore, as will be discussed elsewhere in this Resolution, the filing of the instant petition was not time-barred. The issue of prescription must be addressed in light of the public interest that quo warranto is meant to protect.

Accordingly, the Court could, as it did in Estrada, assume jurisdiction over the instant quo warranto petition against an impeachable officer.

Quo warranto and impeachment are two distinct proceedings, although both may result in the ouster of a public officer. Strictly speaking, quo warranto grants the relief of "ouster", while impeachment affords "removal."

A quo warranto proceeding is the proper legal remedy to determine a person's right or title to a public office and to oust the holder from its enjoyment.[11] It is the proper action to inquire into a public officer's eligibility[12] or the validity of his appointment.[13] Under Rule 66 of the Rules of Court, a quo warranto proceeding involves a judicial determination of the right to the use or exercise of the office.

Impeachment, on the other hand, is a political process undertaken by the legislature to determine whether the public officer committed any of the impeachable offenses, namely, culpable violation of the Constitution, treason, bribery, graft and corruption, other high crimes, or betrayal of public trust.[14] It does not ascertain the officer's eligibility for appointment or election, or challenge the legality of his assumption of office. Conviction for any of the impeachable offenses shall result in the removal of the impeachable official from office.[15]

The OSG's quo warranto petition challenged respondent's right and title to the position of Chief Justice. He averred that in failing to regularly disclose her assets, liabilities and net worth as a member of the career service prior to her appointment as an Associate Justice of the Court, respondent could not be said to possess the requirement of proven integrity demanded of every aspiring member of the Judiciary. The OSG thus prayed that respondent's appointment as Chief Justice be declared void.

Clearly, the OSG questioned the respondent's eligibility for appointment as Chief Justice and sought to invalidate such appointment. The OSG's petition, therefore, is one for quo warranto over which the Court exercises original jurisdiction.

As the Court previously held, "where the dispute is on the eligibility to perform the duties by the person sought to be ousted or disqualified a quo warranto is the proper action."[16]

Respondent harps on the supposed intent of the framers of the Constitution for impeachable officers to be removed only through impeachment.[17] However, a circumspect examination of the deliberations of the 1986 Constitutional Commission will reveal that the framers presumed that the impeachable officers had duly qualified for the position. Indeed, the deliberations which respondent herself cited[18] showed that the framers did not contemplate a situation where the impeachable officer was unqualified for appointment or election.

Accordingly, respondent's continued reliance on the Court's pronouncement in Mayor Lecaroz v. Sandiganbayan,[19] Cuenco v. Hon. Fernan,[20] In Re Gonzales,[21] Jarque v. Desierto[22] and Marcoleta v. Borra[23] (Lecaroz etc.) is misplaced. Not one of these cases concerned the validity of an impeachable officer's appointment. To repeat, Lecaroz involved a criminal charge against a mayor before the Sandiganbayan, while the rest were disbarment cases filed against impeachable officers principally for acts done during their tenure in public office. The officers' eligibility or the validity of their appointment was not raised before the Court. The principle laid down in said cases is to the effect that during their incumbency, impeachable officers cannot be criminally prosecuted for an offense that carries with it the penalty of removal, and if they are required to be members of the Philippine Bar to qualify for their positions, they cannot be charged with disbarment. The proscription does not extend to actions assailing the public officer's title or right to the office he or she occupies. The ruling therefore cannot serve as authority to hold that a quo warranto action can never be filed against an impeachable officer.

The Court's quo warranto jurisdiction over impeachable officers also finds basis in paragraph 7, Section 4, Article VII of the Constitution which designates it as the sole judge of the qualifications of the President and Vice­ President, both of whom are impeachable officers. With this authority, the remedy of quo warranto was provided in the rules of the Court sitting as the Presidential Electoral Tribunal (PET).

Respondent, however, argues that quo warranto petitions may be filed against the President and Vice-President under the PET Rules "only because the Constitution specifically permits" them under Section 4, Article VII. According to respondent, no counterpart provision exists in the Constitution giving the same authority to the Court over the Chief Justice, the members of the Constitutional Commissions and the Ombudsman. Respondent, thus, asserts that the Constitution made a distinction between elected and appointive impeachable officials, and limited quo warranto to elected impeachable officials. For these reasons, respondent concludes that by constitutional design, the Court is denied power to remove any of its members.[24]

The Court is not convinced. The argument, to begin with, acknowledges that the Constitution in fact allows quo warranto actions against impeachable officers, albeit respondent limits them to the President and Vice-President. This admission refutes the very position taken by respondent that all impeachable officials cannot be sued through quo warranto because they belong to a "privileged class" of officers who can be removed only through impeachment.[25] To be sure, Lecaroz, etc. did not distinguish between elected and appointed impeachable officers.

Furthermore, that the Constitution does not show a counterpart provision to paragraph 7 of Section 4, Article VII for members of this Court or the Constitutional Commissions does not mean that quo warranto cannot extend to non-elected impeachable officers. The authority to hear quo warranto petitions against appointive impeachable officers emanates from Section 5(1) of Article VIII which grants quo warranto jurisdiction to this Court without qualification as to the class of public officers over whom the same may be exercised.

Respondent argues that Section 5(1) of Article VIII is not a blanket authority, otherwise paragraph 7 of Section 4, Article VII would be "superfluous." Superfluity, however, is not the same as inconsistency. Section 4, Article VII is not repugnant to, and clearly confirms, the Court's quo warranto jurisdiction under Section 5(1) of Article VIII. Respondent herself has not alleged any irreconcilability in these provisions.

Indeed, contrary to respondent's claim, Section 4 of Article VII is not meant to limit the Court's quo warranto jurisdiction under Article VIII of the Constitution. In fact, We held that "[t]he power wielded by PET is "a derivative of the plenary judicial power allocated to the courts of law, expressly provided in the Constitution."[26] Thus, the authority under Section 4 of Article VII to hear quo warranto petitions assailing the qualifications of the President and Vice-President is simply a component of the Court's quo warranto jurisdiction under Article VIII. This finds support in the nature of quo warranto as a remedy to determine a person's right or title to a public office,[27] which is not confined to claims of ineligibility but extends to other instances or claims of usurpation or unlawful holding of public office as in the cases of Lota v. CA and Sangalang,[28] Moro v. Del Castillo, Jr.,[29] Mendoza v. Allas,[30] Sen. Defensor Santiago v. Sen. Guingona, Jr.[31] and Estrada. It will be recalled that in Estrada, the Court took cognizance of, and ruled upon, a quo warranto challenge to a vice-president's assumption of the presidency; the challenge was based, not on ineligibility, but on therein petitioner's claim that he had not resigned and was simply a president on leave. To sustain respondent's argument, therefore, is to unduly curtail the Court's judicial power and to dilute the efficacy of quo warranto as a remedy against the "unauthorized arbitrary assumption and exercise of power by one without color of title or who is not entitled by law thereto."[32] It bears to reiterate that:
While an appointment is an essentially discretionary executive power, it is subject to the limitation that the appointee should possess none of the disqualifications but all the qualifications required by law. Where the law prescribes certain qualifications for a given office or position, courts may determine whether the appointee has the requisite qualifications, absent which, his right or title thereto may be declared void.[33] (Citations omitted and emphasis ours)
This Court has the constitutional mandate to exercise jurisdiction over quo warranto petitions. And as Estrada and the PET Rules show, impeachable officers are not immune to quo warranto actions. Thus, a refusal by the Court to take cognizance of this case would not only be a breach of its duty under the Constitution, it would also accord respondent an exemption not given to other impeachable officers. Such privilege finds no justification either in law, as impeachable officers are treated without distinction under the impeachment provisions[34] of the Constitution, or in reason, as the qualifications of the Chief Justice are no less important than the President's or the Vice-President's.

Respondent's insistence that she could not be removed from office except through impeachment is predicated on Section 2, Article XI of the Constitution. It reads:
Sec. 2. The President, the Vice-President, the Members of the Supreme Court, the Members of the Constitutional Commissions, and the Ombudsman may be removed from office on impeachment for, and conviction of, culpable violation of the Constitution, treason, bribery, graft and corruption, other high crimes, or betrayal of public trust. All other public officers and employees may be removed from office as provided by law, but not by impeachment. (Emphasis ours)
By its plain language, however, Section 2 of Article XI does not preclude a quo warranto action questioning an impeachable officer's qualifications to assume office. These qualifications include age, citizenship and professional experience - matters which are manifestly outside the purview of impeachment under the above-cited provision.

Furthermore, Section 2 of Article XI cannot be read in isolation from Section 5(1) of Article VIII of the Constitution which gives this Court its quo warranto jurisdiction, or from Section 4, paragraph 7 of Article VII of the Constitution which designates the Court as the sole judge of the qualifications of the President and Vice-President.

In Civil Liberties Union v. The Executive Secretary,[35] the Court held:
It is a well-established rule in constitutional construction that no one provision of the Constitution is to be separated from all the others, to be considered alone, but that all the provisions bearing upon a particular subject are to be brought into view and to be so interpreted as to effectuate the great purposes of the instrument. Sections bearing on a particular subject should be considered and interpreted together as to effectuate the whole purpose of the Constitution and one section is not to be allowed to defeat another, if by any reasonable construction, the two can be made to stand together.

In other words, the court must harmonize them, if practicable, and must lean in favor of a construction which will render every word operative, rather than one which may make the words idle and nugatory.[36] (Citations omitted)
Section 2 of Article XI provides that the impeachable officers may be removed from office on impeachment for and conviction of culpable violation of the Constitution, treason, bribery, graft and corruption, other high crimes, or betrayal of public trust. Lack of qualifications for appointment or election is evidently not among the stated grounds for impeachment. It is, however, a ground for a quo warranto action over which this Court was given original jurisdiction under Section 5(1) of Article VIII. The grant of jurisdiction was not confined to unimpeachable officers. In fact, under Section 4, paragraph 7 of Article VII, this Court was expressly authorized to pass upon the qualifications of the President and Vice­ President. Thus, the proscription against the removal of public officers other than by impeachment does not apply to quo warranto actions assailing the impeachable officer's eligibility for appointment or election.

This construction allows all three provisions to stand together and to give effect to the clear intent of the Constitution to address not only the impeachable offenses but also the issue of qualifications of public officers, including impeachable officers.

As this Court intoned in its Decision, to take appointments of impeachable officers beyond the reach of judicial review is to cleanse them of any possible defect pertaining to the constitutionally prescribed qualifications which cannot otherwise be raised in an impeachment proceeding.

To illustrate this, the Court cited the requirement that the impeachable officer must be a natural-born citizen of the Philippines. We explained that if it turns out that the impeachable officer is in fact of foreign nationality, respondent's argument will prevent this Court from inquiring into this important qualification that directly affects the officer's ability to protect the interests of the State. Unless convicted of an impeachable offense, the officer will continue in office despite being clearly disqualified from holding it. We stressed that this could not have been the intent of the framers of the Constitution.

Respondent, however, contends that the above-cited defect will actually constitute a ground for impeachment because the appointee's continued exercise of public functions despite knowledge of his foreign nationality amounts to a culpable violation of the Constitution.

The argument is untenable. Citizenship is a qualification issue which this Court has the authority to resolve. Thus, in Kilosbayan Foundation v. Exec. Sec. Ermita,[37] where the appointment of Sandiganbayan Justice Gregory S. Ong (Ong) to this Court was sought to be annulled for the latter's supposed failure to comply with the citizenship requirement under the Constitution, We stated that:
Third, as to the proper forum for litigating the issue of respondent Ong's qualification for membership of this Court. This case is a matter of primordial importance involving compl.iance with a Constitutional mandate. As the body tasked with the determination of the merits of conflicting claims under the Constitution, the Court is the proper forum for resolving the issue, even as the JBC has the initial competence to do so.[38] (Citation omitted and emphasis ours)
In the subsequent case of Topacio v. Assoc. Justice Gregory Santos Ong, et al.,[39] Ong's citizenship was raised anew, this time to prevent him from further exercising the office of a Sandiganbayan Associate Justice. The Court held that the challenge was one against Ong's title to the office which must be raised in a quo warranto proceeding, thus:
While denominated as a petition for certiorari and prohibition, the petition partakes of the nature of a quo warranto proceeding with respect to Ong, for it effectively seeks to declare null and void his appointment as an Associate Justice of the Sandiganbayan for being unconstitutional. While the petition professes to be one for certiorari and prohibition, petitioner even adverts to a quo warranto aspect of the petition.

Being a collateral attack on a public officer's title, the present petition for certiorari and prohibition must be dismissed.

The title to a public office may not be contested except directly, by quo warranto proceedings; and it cannot be assailed collaterally, even through mandamus or a motion to annul or set aside order. In Nacionalista Party v. De Vera, the Court ruled that prohibition does not lie to inquire into the validity of the appointment of a public officer.
x x x [T]he writ of prohibition, even when directed against persons acting as judges or other judicial officers, cannot be treated as a substitute for quo warranto or be rightfully called upon to perform any of the functions of the writ. If there is a court, judge or officer de facto, the title to the office and the right to act cannot be questioned by prohibition. If an intruder takes possession of a judicial office, the person dispossessed cannot obtain relief through a writ of prohibition commanding the alleged intruder to cease from performing judicial acts, since in its very nature prohibition is an improper remedy by which to determine the title to an office.[40] (Citations omitted and emphasis ours)
Determining title to the office on the basis of a public officer's qualifications is the function of quo warranto. For this reason, impeachment cannot be treated as a substitute for quo warranto.

Furthermore, impeachment was designed as a mechanism "to check abuse of power."[41] The grounds for impeachment, including culpable violation of the Constitution, have been described as referring to "serious crimes or misconduct"[42] of the "vicious and malevolent" kind.[43] Citizenship issues are hardly within the ambit of this constitutional standard.

The Constitution must be construed in light of the object sought to be accomplished and the evils sought to be prevented or remedied.[44] An interpretation that would cause absurdity is not favored.[45]

It thus bears to reiterate that even the PET Rules expressly provide for the remedy of election protest. Following respondent's theory that an impeachable officer can be removed only through impeachment means that a President or Vice-President against whom an election protest has been filed can demand for the dismissal of the protest on the ground that it can potentially cause his/her removal from office through a mode other than by impeachment. To sustain respondent's position is to render election protests under the PET Rules nugatory. The Constitution could not have intended such absurdity since fraud and irregularities in elections cannot be countenanced, and the will of the people as reflected in their votes must be determined and respected.

The preposterousness of allowing unqualified public officials to continue occupying their positions by making impeachment the sole mode of removing them was likewise aptly discussed by Our esteemed colleague Justice Estela M. Perlas-Bernabe when she stated that qualification should precede authority, viz:
Owing to both the "political" and "offense-based" nature of these grounds, I am thus inclined to believe that impeachment is not the sole mode of "removing" impeachable officials as it be clearly absurd for any of them to remain in office despite their failure to meet the minimum eligibility requirements, which failure does not constitute a ground for impeachment. Sensibly, there should be a remedy to oust all our public officials, no matter how high-ranking they are or criticial their functions may be, upon a determination that they have not actually qualified for election or appointment. While I do recognize the wisdom of insulating impeachable officials from suits that may impede the performance of vital public functions, ultimately, this concern cannot override the basic qualification requirements of public office. There is no doubt that qualification should precede authority. Every public office is created and conferred by law. x x x.[46] (Emphasis in the original)
Underlying all constitutional provisions on government service is the principle that public office is a public trust.[47] The people, therefore, have the right to have only qualified individuals appointed to public office. To construe Section 2, Article XI of the Constitution as proscribing a quo warranto petition is to deprive the State of a remedy to correct a public wrong arising from defective or void appointments. Equity, however, will not suffer a wrong to be without remedy.[48] It stands to reason, therefore, that quo warranto should be available to question the validity of appointments especially of impeachable officers since they occupy the upper echelons of government and are capable of wielding vast power and influence on matters of law and policy.

III

Much noise and hysteria have been made that a sitting Chief Justice can only be removed by impeachment and that quo warranto is an improper remedy not sanctioned by the Constitution. The wind of disinformation was further fanned by respondent who claimed that her ouster was orchestrated by the President. This campaign of misinformation attempted to conceal and obfuscate the fact that the main issue in the petition which the Court is tasked to resolve is the qualification of respondent.

In the instant motion, respondent made mention of Senate Resolution No. 738,[49] which urges this Court to review Our May 11, 2018 Decision as it sets a "dangerous precedent that transgresses the exclusive powers of the legislative branch to initiate, try and decide all cases of impeachment." This Resolution was supposedly aimed to express "the sense of the Senate to uphold the Constitution on the matter of removing a Chief Justice from office." We have to remind the respondent, however, that while a majority of the Senators - 14 out of the 23 members - signed the said Resolution, the same has not yet been adopted by the Senate to date. In fact, the Court takes judicial notice that on May 31, 2018, the Senate adjourned its interpellation without any conclusion as to whether the Resolution is adopted.[50] Without such approval, the Senate Resolution amounts to nothing but a mere scrap of paper at present.

The Senate Resolution also appears to have been drafted, signed by some Senators, and interpellated on while respondent's motion for reconsideration is still pending consideration by the Court. While the concerned Members of the Senate insist on non-encroachment of powers, the Senate Resolution itself tends to influence, if not exert undue pressure on, the Court on how it should resolve the pending motion for reconsideration. The importance and high regard for the institution that is the Senate is undisputed. But the Court, in the discharge of its Constitutional duty, is also entitled to the same degree of respect and deference.

At any rate, and with due regard to the Members of the Senate, We emphasize that the judicial determination of actual controversies presented before the courts is within the exclusive domain of the Judiciary. "The separation of powers doctrine is the backbone of our tripartite system of government. It is implicit in the manner that our Constitution lays out in separate and distinct Articles the powers and prerogatives of each co-equal branch of govemment."[51] Thus, the act of some of the Senators questioning the Court's judicial action is clearly an unwarranted intrusion to the Court's powers and mandate.

To disabuse wandering minds, there is nothing violative or intrusive of the Senate's power to remove impeachable officials in the main Decision. In fact, in the said assailed Decision, We recognized that the Senate has the sole power to try and decide all cases of impeachment. We have extensively discussed therein that the Court merely exercised its Constitutional duty to resolve a legal question referring to respondent's qualification as a Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. We also emphasized that this Court's action never intends to deprive the Congress of its mandate to make a determination on impeachable officials' culpability for acts committed while in office. We even explained that impeachment and quo warranto may proceed independently and simultaneously, albeit a ruling of removal or ouster of the respondent in one case will preclude the same ruling in the other due to legal impossibility and mootness.

Quo warranto is not a figment of imagination or invention of this Court. It is a mandate boldly enshrined in the Constitution[52] where the judiciary is conferred original jurisdiction to the exclusion of the other branches of the government. Quo warranto, not impeachment, is the constitutional remedy prescribed to adjudicate and resolve questions relating to qualifications, eligibility and entitlement to public office. Those who chose to ignore this fact are Constitutionally blind. US Supreme Court Justice Scalia once said: "If it is in the Constitution, it is there. If it is not in the Constitution, it is not there."[53] There is nothing in Our Constitution that says that impeachable officers are immuned, exempted, or excluded from quo warranto proceedings when the very issue to be determined therein is the status of an officer as such. No amount of public indignation can rewrite or deface the Constitution.

IV

The plain issue in the instant case is whether respondent is eligible to occupy the position of Chief Justice. To determine whether or not respondent is eligible, the primordial consideration is whether respondent met the requisite Constitutional requirements for the position. Questions on eligibility therefore present a justiciable issue, which can be resolved by juxtaposing the facts with the Constitution, as well as pertinent laws and jurisprudence. In Kilosbayan Foundation,[54] the Court affirmed its jurisdiction to resolve the issue on the qualification for membership of this Court as the body tasked with the determination of the merits of conflicting claims under the Constitution, even when the JBC has the initial competence to do so.[55]

True enough, constitutionally committed to the JBC is the principal function of recommending appointees to the Judiciary. The function to recommend appointees carries with it the concomitant duty to screen applicants therefor. The JBC's exercise of its recommendatory function must nevertheless conform with the basic premise that the appointee possesses the non-negotiable qualifications prescribed by the Constitution. While the JBC enjoys a certain leeway in screening aspiring magistrates, such remains to be tightly circumscribed by the Constitutional qualifications for aspiring members of the Judiciary.[56] These Constitutional prerequisites are therefore deemed written into the rules and standards which the JBC may prescribe in the discharge of its primary function. The JBC cannot go beyond or less than what the Constitution prescribes.

The surrender to the JBC of the details as to how these qualifications are to be determined is rendered necessary and in keeping with its recommendatory function which is nevertheless made expressly subject to the Court's exercise of supervision.

As an incident of its power of supervision over the JBC, the Court has the authority to insure that the JBC performs its duties under the Constitution and complies with its own rules and standards. Indeed, supervision is an active power and implies the authority to inquire into facts and conditions that renders the power of supervision real and effective.[57] Under its power of supervision, the Court has ample authority to look into the processes leading to respondent's nomination for the position of Chief Justice on the face of the Republic's contention that respondent was ineligible to be a candidate to the position to begin with.

Arguments were raised against the Court's assumption over the quo warranto petition on the premise that the determination of the integrity requirement lies solely on the JBC's discretion and thus, a prior nullification of the JBC's act on the ground of grave abuse of discretion through a certiorari petition is the proper legal route.

The question of whether or not a nominee possesses the requisite qualifications is determined based on facts and as such, generates no exercise of discretion on the part of the nominating body. Thus, whether a nominee is of the requisite age, is a natural-born citizen, has met the years of law practice, and is of proven competence, integrity, probity, and independence are to be determined based on facts and cannot be made dependent on inference or discretion, much less concessions, which the recommending authority may make or extend. To say that the determination of whether a nominee is of "proven integrity" is a task absolutely contingent upon the discretion of the JBC is to place the integrity requirement on a plateau different from the rest of the Constitutional requirements, when no such distinction is assigned by the Constitution. As well, to treat as discretionary on the part of the JBC the question of whether a nominee is of "proven integrity" is to render the Court impotent to nullify an otherwise unconstitutional nomination unless the Court's jurisdiction is invoked on the ground of grave abuse of discretion. Such severely limiting course of action would effectively diminish the Court's collegial power of supervision over the JBC.

To re-align the issue in this petition, the Republic charges respondent of unlawfully holding or exercising the position of Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. The contents of the petition pose an attack to respondent's authority to hold or exercise the position. Unmoving is the rule that title to a public office may not be contested except directly, by quo warranto proceedings.[58] As it cannot be assailed collaterally, certiorari is an infirm remedy for this purpose. It is for this reason that the Court previously denied a certiorari and prohibition petition which sought to annul appointment to the Judiciary of an alleged naturalized citizen.[59]

Aguinaldo, et al. v. Aquino, et al.,[60] settles that when it is the qualification for the position that is in issue, the proper remedy is quo warranto pursuant to Topacio.[61] But when it is the act of the appointing power that is placed under scrutiny and not any disqualification on the part of the appointee, a petition for certiorari challenging the appointment for being unconstitutional or for having been done in grave abuse of discretion is the apt legal course. In Aguinaldo, the Court elucidated:
The Court recognized in Jardeleza v. Sereno that a petition for certiorari is a proper remedy to question the act of any branch or instrumentality of the government on the ground of grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction by any branch or instrumentality of the government even if the latter does not exercise judicial, quasi-judicial or ministerial functions.

In opposing the instant Petition for Certiorari and Prohibition, the OSG cites Topacio in which the Court declares that title to a public office may not be contested except directly, by quo warranto proceedings; and it cannot be assailed collaterally, such as by certiorari and prohibition.

However, Topacio is not on all fours with the instant case. In Topacio, the writs of certiorari and prohibition were sought against Sandiganbayan Associate Justice Gregory S. Ong on the ground that he lacked the qualification of Filipino citizenship for said position. In contrast, the present Petition for Certiorari and Prohibition puts under scrutiny, not any disqualification on the part of respondents Musngi and Econg, but the act of President Aquino in appointing respondents Musngi and Econg as Sandiganbayan Associate Justices without regard for the clustering of nominees into six separate shortlists by the JBC, which allegedly violated the Constitution and constituted grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction. This would not be the first time that the Court, in the exercise of its expanded power of judicial review, takes cognizance of a petition for certiorari that challenges a presidential appointment for being unconstitutional or for having been done in grave abuse of discretion. x x x.[62] (Italics and citations omitted.)
A certiorari petition also lacks the safeguards installed in a quo warranto action specifically designed to promote stability in public office and remove perpetual uncertainty in the title of the person holding the office. For one, a certiorari petition thrives on allegation and proof of grave abuse of discretion. In a quo warranto action, it is imperative to demonstrate that the respondent have usurped, intruded into or unlawfully held or exercised a public office, position or franchise.

For another, certiorari may be filed by any person alleging to have been aggrieved by an act done with grave abuse of discretion. In a quo warranto action, it is the Solicitor General or a public prosecutor, when directed by the President or when upon complaint or when he has good reason to believe that the grounds for quo warranto can be established by proof, who must commence the action. The only instance when an individual is allowed to commence such action is when he or she claims to be entitled to a public office or position usurped or unlawfully held or exercised by another. In such case, it is incumbent upon the private person to present proof of a clear and indubitable right to the office. If certiorari is accepted as the proper legal vehicle to assail eligibility to public office then any person, although unable to demonstrate clear and indubitable right to the office, and merely upon claim of grave abuse of discretion, can place title to public office in uncertainty.

Tellingly also, the rules on quo warranto do not require that the recommending or appointing authority be impleaded as a necessary party, much less makes the nullification of the act of the recommending authority a condition precedent before the remedy of quo warranto can be availed of. The JBC itself did not bother to intervene in the instant petition.

Under Section 6, Rule 66 of the Rules of Court, when the action is against a person for usurping a public office, position or franchise, it is only required that, if there be a person who claims to be entitled thereto, his or her name should be set forth in the petition with an averment of his or her right to the office, position or franchise and that the respondent is unlawfully in possession thereof. All persons claiming to be entitled to the public office, position or franchise may be made parties and their respective rights may be determined in the same quo warranto action. The appointing authority, or in this case the recommending authority which is the JBC, is therefore not a necessary party in a quo warranto action.

Peculiar also to the instant petition is the surrounding circumstance that an administrative matter directly pertaining to the nomination of respondent is pending before the Court. While the administrative matter aims to determine whether there is culpability or lapses on the part of the JBC members, the factual narrative offered by the latter are all extant on record which the Court can take judicial notice of. Thus, considerations regarding the lack of due process on the part of the JBC present only a superficial resistance to the Court's assumption of jurisdiction over the instant quo warranto petition.

In any case, the rules on quo warranto vests upon the Court ancillary jurisdiction to render such further judgment as "justice requires."[63] Indeed, the doctrine of ancillary jurisdiction implies the grant of necessary and usual incidental powers essential to effectuate its jurisdiction and subject to existing laws and constitutional provisions, every regularly constituted court has power to do all things that are reasonably necessary for the administration of justice within the scope of its jurisdiction and for the enforcement of its judgments and mandates.[64] Accordingly, "demands, matters or questions ancillary or incidental to, or growing out of, the main action, and coming within the above principles, may be taken cognizance of by the court and determined, since such jurisdiction is in aid of its authority over the principal matter, even though the court may thus be called on to consider and decide matters which, as original causes of action, would not be within its cognizance."[65]

V

This Court had likewise amply laid down the legal and factual bases for its ruling against the dismissal of the instant petition on the ground of prescription. Our ruling on this matter is anchored upon the very purpose of such prescriptive period as consistently held by this Court for decades and also upon consideration of the unique underlying circumstances in this case which cannot be ignored.

In addition to the catena of cases cited in the assailed Decision, the Court, in Madrigal v. Prov. Gov. Lecaroz,[66] exhaustively explained the rationale behind the prescriptive period:
The unbending jurisprudence in this jurisdiction is to the effect that a petition for quo warranto and mandamus affecting titles to public office must be filed within one (1) year from the date the petitioner is ousted from his position. x x x The reason behind this being was expounded in the case of Unabia v. City Mayor, etc., x x x where We said:

"x x x [W]e note that in actions of quo warranto involving right to an office, the action must be instituted within the period of one year. This has been the law in the island since 1901, the period having been originally fixed in Section 216 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Act No. 190). We find this provision to be an expression of policy on the part of the State that persons claiming a right to an office of which they are illegally dispossessed should immediately take steps to recover said office and that if they do not do so within a period of one year, they shall be considered as having lost their right thereto by abandonment. There are weighty reasons of public policy and convenience that demand the adoption of a similar period for persons claiming rights to positions in the civil service. There must be stability in the service so that public business may [not] be unduly retarded; delays in the statement of the right to positions in the service must be discouraged. The following considerations as to public officers, by Mr. Justice Bengzon, may well be applicable to employees in the civil service:
'Furthermore, constitutional rights may certainly be waived, and the inaction of the officer for one year could be validly considered as waiver, i.e., a renunciation which no principle of justice may prevent, he being at liberty to resign his position anytime he pleases.

'And there is good justification for the limitation period; it is not proper that the title to public office should be subjected to continued uncertain[t]y, and the peoples' interest require that such right should be determined as speedily as practicable.'
"Further, the Government must be immediately informed or advised if any person claims to be entitled to an office or a position in the civil service as against another actually holding it, so that the Government may not be faced with the predicament of having to pay the salaries, one, for the person actually holding the office, although illegally, and another, for one not actually rendering service although entitled to do so. x x x."[67] (Citations omitted and emphasis ours)
The long line of cases decided by this Court since the 1900's, which specifically explained the spirit behind the rule providing a prescriptive period for the filing of an action for quo warranto, reveals that such limitation can be applied only against private individuals claiming rights to a public office, not against the State.

Indeed, there is no proprietary right over a public office. Hence, a claimed right over a public office may be waived. In fact, even Constitutionally-protected rights may be waived. Thus, We have consistently held that the inaction of a person claiming right over a public office to assert the same within the prescriptive period provided by the rules, may be considered a waiver of such right. This is where the difference between a quo warranto filed by a private individual as opposed to one filed by the State through the Solicitor General lies. There is no claim of right over a public office where it is the State itself, through the Solicitor General, which files a petition for quo warranto to question the eligibility of the person holding the public office. As We have emphasized in the assailed Decision, unlike Constitutionally-protected rights, Constitutionally-required qualifications for a public office can never be waived either deliberately or by mere passage of time. While a private individual may, in proper instances, be deemed to have waived his or her right over title to public office and/or to have acquiesced or consented to the loss of such right, no organized society would allow, much more a prudent court would consider, the State to have waived by mere lapse of time, its right to uphold and ensure compliance with the requirements for such office, fixed by no less than the Constitution, the fundamental law upon which the foundations of a State stand, especially so when the government cannot be faulted for such lapse.

On another point, the one-year prescriptive period was necessary for the government to be immediately informed if any person claims title to an office so that the government may not be faced with the predicament of having to pay two salaries, one for the person actually holding it albeit illegally, and another to the person not rendering service although entitled to do so. It would thus be absurd to require the filing of a petition for quo warranto within the one-year period for such purpose when it is the State itself which files the same not for the purpose of determining who among two private individuals are entitled to the office. Stated in a different manner, the purpose of the instant petition is not to inform the government that it is facing a predicament of having to pay two salaries; rather, the government, having learned of the predicament that it might be paying an unqualified person, is acting upon it head-on.

Most importantly, urgency to resolve the controversy on the title to a public office to prevent a hiatus or disruption in the delivery of public service is the ultimate consideration in prescribing a limitation on when an action for quo warranto may be instituted. However, it is this very same concern that precludes the application of the prescriptive period when it is the State which questions the eligibility of the person holding a public office and not merely the personal interest of a private individual claiming title thereto. Again, as We have stated in the assailed Decision, when the government is the real party in interest and asserts its rights, there can be no defense on the ground of laches or limitation,[68] otherwise, it would be injurious to public interest if this Court will not act upon the case presented before it by the Republic and merely allow the uncertainty and controversy surrounding the Chief Justice position to continue.

Worthy to mention is the fact that this is not the first time that this Court precluded the application of the prescriptive period in filing a petition for quo warranto. In Cristobal v. Melchor,[69] the Court considered certain exceptional circumstances attending the case, which took it out of the rule on the one-year prescriptive period. Also, in Agcaoili v. Suguitan,[70] the Court considered, among others, therein petitioner's good faith and the injustice that he suffered due to his forcible ouster from office in ruling that he is not bound by the provision on the prescriptive period in filing his action for quo warranto to assert his right to the public office. When the Court in several cases exercised liberality in the application of the statute of limitations in favor of private individuals so as not to defeat their personal interests on a public position, is it not but proper, just, reasonable, and more in accord with the spirit of the rule for this Court to decide against the application of the prescriptive period considering the public interest involved? Certainly, it is every citizen's interest to have qualified individuals to hold public office, especially that of the highest position in the Judiciary.

From the foregoing disquisition, it is clear that this Court's ruling on the issue of prescription is not grounded upon provisions of the Civil Code, specifically Article 1108(4)[71] thereof. Instead, the mention thereof was intended merely to convey that if the principle that "prescription does not lie against the State" can be applied with regard to property disputes, what more if the underlying consideration is public interest.

To be clear, this Court is not abolishing the limitation set by the rules in instituting a petition for quo warranto. The one-year presciptive period under Section 11, Rule 66 of the Rules of Court still stands. However, for reasons explained above and in the main Decision, this Court made distinctions as to when such prescriptive period applies, to wit: (1) when filed by the State at its own instance, through the Solicitor General,[72] prescription shall not apply. This, of course, does not equate to a blanket authority given to the Solicitor General to indiscriminately file baseless quo warranto actions in disregard of the constitutionally-protected rights of individuals; (2) when filed by the Solicitor General or public prosecutor at the request and upon relation of another person, with leave of court,[73] prescription shall apply except when established jurisprudential exceptions[74] are present; and (3) when filed by an individual in his or her own name,[75] prescription shall apply, except when established jurisprudential exceptions are present. In fine, Our pronouncement in the assailed Decision as to this matter explained that certain circumstances preclude the absolute and strict application of the prescriptive period provided under the rules in filing a petition for quo warranto.

Thus, this Court finds no reason to reverse its ruling that an action for quo warranto is imprescriptible if brought by the State at its own instance, as in the instant case.

In any case, and as aptly discussed in the main Decision, the peculiarities of the instant case preclude strict application of the one-year prescriptive period against the State. As observed by Justice Perlas-Bernabe in her Separate Opinion, "x x x if there is one thing that is glaringly apparent from these proceedings, it is actually the lack of respondent's candor and forthrightness in the submission of her SALNs."[76] Respondent's actions prevented the State from discovering her disqualification within the prescriptive period. Most certainly, thus the instant case is one of those proper cases where the one-year prescriptive period set under Section 11, Rule 66 of the Rules of Court should not apply.

VI

Respondent reiterates her argument that her case should be treated similarly as in Concerned Taxpayer v. Doblada Jr.[77]

As extensively discussed in the main Decision, respondent, unlike Doblada, did not present contrary proof to rebut the Certifications from U.P. HRDO that respondent's SALNs for 1986, 1987, 1988, 1992, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2006 are not in its possession and from the Ombudsman that based on its records, there is no SALN filed by respondent except that for 1998. Being uncontroverted, these documents suffice to support this Court's conclusion that respondent failed to file her SALNs in accordance with law.

In Doblada, the contrary proof was in the form of the letter of the head of the personnel of Branch 155 that the SALN for 2000 exists and was duly transmitted and received by the Office of the Court Administrator as the repository agency. In respondent's case, other than her bare allegations attacking the credibility of the aforesaid certifications from U.P. HRDO and the Ombudsman, no supporting proof was presented. It bears to note that these certifications from the aforesaid public agencies enjoy a presumption that official duty has been regularly performed. These certifications suffice as proof of respondent's failure to file her SALN until contradicted or overcome by sufficient evidence. Consequently, absent a countervailing evidence, such disputable presumption becomes conclusive.[78]

As what this Court has stated in its May 11, 2018 Decision, while government employees cannot be required to keep their SALNs for more than 10 years based from the provisions of Section 8, paragraph C(4) of Republic Act No. 6713,[79] the same cannot substitute for respondent's manifest ineligibility at the time of her application. Verily, even her more recent SALNs, such as those in the years of 2002 to 2006, which in the ordinary course of things would have been easier to retrieve, were not presented nor accounted for by respondent.

Respondent attempts to strike a parallelism with Doblada by claiming that she, too, religiously filed her SALNs. The similarity however, ends there. Unlike in Doblada, respondent failed to present contrary proof to rebut the evidence of non-filing. If, indeed, she never missed filing her SALNs and the same were merely lost, or missing in the records of the repository agency, this Court sees nothing that would prevent respondent from securing a Certification which would provide a valid or legal reason for the copies' non-production.

VII

Respondent insists that the filing of SALNs bears no relation to the Constitutional qualification of integrity. For her, the measure of integrity should be as what the JBC sets it to be and that in any case, the SALN laws, being malum prohibitum, do not concern adherence to moral and ethical principles.

Respondent's argument, however, dangerously disregards that the filing of SALN is not only a requirement under the law, but a positive duty required from every public officer or employee, first and foremost by the Constitution.[80] The SALN laws were passed in aid of the enforcement of the Constitutional duty to submit a declaration under oath of one's assets, liabilities, and net worth. This positive Constitutional duty of filing one's SALN is so sensitive and important that it even shares the same category as the Constitutional duty imposed upon public officers and employees to owe allegiance to the State and the Constitution.[81] As such, offenses against the SALN laws are not ordinary offenses but violations of a duty which every public officer and employee owes to the State and the Constitution. In other words, the violation of SALN laws, by itself, defeats any claim of integrity as it is inherently immoral to violate the will of the legislature and to violate the Constitution.

Integrity, as what this Court has defined in the assailed Decision, in relation to a judge's qualifications, should not be viewed separately from the institution he or she represents. Integrity contemplates both adherence to the highest moral standards and obedience to laws and legislations. Integrity, at its minimum, entails compliance with the law.

ln sum, respondent has not presented any convincing ground that would merit a modification or reversal of Our May 11, 2018 Decision. Respondent, at the time of her application, lacked proven integrity on account of her failure to file a substantial number of SALNs and also, her failure to submit the required SALNs to the JBC during her application for the position. Although deviating from the majority opinion as to the proper remedy, Justice Antonio T. Carpio shares the same finding:
Since respondent took her oath and assumed her position as Associate Justice of the Supreme Court on 16 August 2010, she was required to file under oath her SALN within thirty (30) days after assumption of office, or until 15 September 2010, and the statements must be reckoned as of her first day (lf service, pursuant to the relevant provisions on SALN filing.

However, respondent failed to file a SALN containing sworn statements reckoned as of her first day of service within thirty (30) days after assuming office. While she allegedly submitted an "entry SALN" on 16 September 2010, it was unsubscribed and the statements of her assets, liabilities and net worth were reckoned as of 31 December 2009, and not as of her first day of service, or as of 16 August 2010. x x x

x x x x

The Constitution, law, and mles clearly require that the sworn entry SALN "must be reckoned as of his/her first day of service" and must be filed "within thirty (30) days after assumption of office." Evidently, respondent failed to file under oath a SALN reckoned as of her first day of service, or as of 16 August 2010, within the prescribed period of thirty (30) days after her assumption of office. In other words, respondent failed to file the required SALN upon her assumption of office, which is a clear violation of Section 17, Article XI of the Constitution. In light of her previous failure to file her SALNs for several years while she was a UP College of Law Professor, her failure to file her SALN upon assuming office in 2010 as Associate Justice of this Court constitutes culpable violation of the Constitution, a violation committed while she was already serving as an impeachable office.[82] (Citation omitted and emphasis ours)
Having settled respondent's ineligibility and ouster from the position, the Court reiterates its directive to the JBC to immediately commence the application, nomination and recommendation process for the position of Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.

WHEREFORE, respondent Maria Lourdes P. A. Sereno's Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration is DENIED with FINALITY for lack of merit. No further pleadings shall be entertained. Let entry of judgment be made immediately.

The Court REITERATES its order to the Judicial and Bar Council to commence the application and nomination process for the position of the Chief Justice without delay. The ninety-day (90) period[83] for filling the vacancy shall be reckoned from the date of the promulgation of this Resolution.

SO ORDERED.

Bersamin, Martires, Reyes, Jr., and Gesmundo, JJ., concur.
Carpio, J., I maintain my Dissent.
Velasco, Jr., J., I maintain my dissent.
Leonardo-De Castro, J., Please see my Separate Concurring Opinion.
Peralta, J., See seperate concurring opinion.
Del Castillo, J., I maintain my dissent.
Perlas-Bernabe, J., I maintain my Separate Opinion.
Leonen, J., I maintain my dissent.
Jardeleza, J., Please see Concurring Opinion.
Caguioa, J., I maintain my dissent.


[1] Rollo, pp. 6230-6382.

[2] Id. at 6380.

[3] Barnes v. Reyes, et al., 614 Phil. 299, 304 (2009).

[4] No. L-79974, December 17, 1987, 156 SCRA 549.

[5] Id. at 552.

[6] Section 1 of Article VIII states:

Sec. 1. The judicial power shall be vested in one Supreme Court and in such lower courts as may be established by law.

Judicial power includes the duty of the courts of justice to settle actual controversies involving rights which are legally demandable and enforceable, and to determine whether or not there has been a grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction on the part of any branch or instrumentality of the Government. (Emphasis ours)

[7] 406 Phil. 1 (2001).

[8] Supra.

[9] Respondent's Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration, pp. 68-69.

[10] Respondent's Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration, p. 69.

[11] Sen. Defensor Santiago v. Sen. Guingona, Jr., 359 Phil. 276, 302 (1998).

[12] Fortuno v. Judge Palma, 240 Phil. 656, 664 ( 1987).

[13] Nacionalista Party v. De Vera, 85 Phil. 126, 133 (1949) and J/Sr. Supt. Engaño v. Court of Appeals, 526 Phil. 291, 297 (2006).

[14] 1987 CONSTITUTION, Article XI, Section 2.

[15] 1987 CONSTITUTION, Article XI. Sections 2 and 3(7).

[16] Fortuna v. Judge Palma, supra at 664.

[17] Respondent's Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration, p. 58.

[18] Respondent's Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration, pp. 58-61.

[19] 213 Phil. 288 (1984).

[20] 241 Phil. 162 (1988).

[21] 243 Phil. 167 (1988).

[22] En Banc Resolution dated December 5, 1995 in A.C. No. 5409.

[23] 601 Phil. 470 (2009).

[24] Respondent's Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration, pp. 67-68.

[25] Respondent's Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration, p. 59.

[26] Atty. Macalintal v. Presidential Electoral Tribunal, 650 Phil. 326, 359 (2010).

[27] Sen. Defensor Santiago v. Sen. Guingona. Jr., supra note 11, at 302.

[28] 112 Phil. 619 (1961).

[29] 662 Phil. 331 (2011).

[30] 362 Phil. 238 (1999).

[31] 359 Phil. 276 (1998)

[12] Sen. Defensor Santiago v. Sen. Guingona, Jr., supra note 11, at 302.

[33] J/Sr. Supt. Engaño v. Court of Appeals, supra note 13, at 299.

[34] 1987 CONSTITUTION, Article XI, Sections 2 and 3.

[35] 272 Phil. 147 (1991).

[36] Id. at 162.

[37] 553 Phil. 331 (2007).

[38] Id. at 340.

[39] 595 Phil. 491 (2008).

[40] Id. at 503.

[41] Chief Justice Corona v. Senate of the Philippines, et al., 691 Phil. 156, 170 (2012).

[42] Id.

[43] Gonzales III v. Office of the President of the Philippines, et al., 694 Phil. 52, 102 (2012).

[44] Atty. Macalintal v. Presidential Electoral Tribunal, supra note 26, at 340; People of the Philippines v. Lacson, 448 Phil. 317, 386 (2003).

[45] Southern Cross Cement Corp. v. Cement Manufacturers Association of the Phil., 503 Phil. 485, 524 (2005).

[46] Separate Opinion of Justice Estela M. Perlas-Bernabe in G.R. No. 237428 dated May 11, 2018, rollo, pp. 6578-6579.

[47] 1987 CoNSTITUTION, Article XI, Sectin 1.

[48] Re: Request of National Committee on Legal Aid to Exempt Legal Aid Clients from Paying Filing, Docket and Other Fees, A.M. No. 08-11-7-SC, August 28, 2009.

[49] RESOLUTION EXPRESSING THE SENSE OF THE SENATE TO UPHOLD THE CONSTITUTION ON THE MATTER OF REMOVING A CHIEF JUSTICE FROM OFFICE.

[50] <http://news.abs-cbn.com/news/05/31/18/senate-fails-to-adopt-resolution-challenging-sereno-ouster> (visited on June 1, 2018).

[51] Padilla, et al. v. Congress of the Phils., G.R. No. 231671, July 25, 2017.

[52] 1987 CONSTITUTION, Article VIII, Section 5.

[53] Scalia and Garner, READING THE LAW: THE INTERPRETATION OF LEGAL TEXTS, pp. 4-6 (2012).

[54] Supra note 37.

[55] Id. at 340.

[56] Villanueva v. Judicial and Bar Council, 757 Phil. 534 (2015).

[57] Planas v. Gil, 67 Phil. 62, 77 (1939).

[58] Topacio v. Assoc. Justice Gregory Santos Ong, et al., supra note 39, at 503 citing Gonzales v. COMELEC, et al., 129 Phil. 7, 29 (1967).

[59] Id.

[60] G.R. No. 224302, November 29, 2016.

[61] Supra note 39.

[62] Aguinaldo, et al. v. Aquino, et al., supra.

[63] Section 9, Rule 66 of the Rules of Court.

[64] The City of Manila, et al. v. Judge Grecia-Cuerdo, et al., 726 Phil. 9, 27 (2014).

[65] Id. at 27-28.

[66] 269 Phil. 20 (1990).

[67] Id. at 25-26.

[68] Republic of the Phils. v. Court of Appeals, 253 Phil. 698, 713 (1989) citing Government of the U.S. v. Judge of the First Instance of Pampanga, 49 Phil. 495, 500 (1965).

[69] 168 Phil. 328 (1977).

[70] 48 Phil. 676 (1929).

[71] Article 1108. Prescription, both acquisitive and extinctive, runs against:
x x x x

(4) Juridical persons. except the State and its subdivisions.
[72] Section 2, Rule 66 of the Rules of Court.

[73] Section 3, Rule 66 of the Rules of Court.

[74] (1) there was no acquiescence to or inaction on the part of the petitioner, amounting to the abandonment of his right to the position; (2) it was an act of the government through its responsible officials which contributed to the delay in the filing of the action; and (3) the petition was grounded upon the assertion that petitioner's removal from the questioned position was contrary to law. [Cristobal v. Melchor and Arcala, 168 Phil. 328 (1977)].

[75] Section 5, Rule 66 of the Rules of Court.

[76] Rollo, p. 6584.

[77] 498 Phil. 395 (2005).

[78] See Alcantara v. Alcantara, 558 Phil. 192 (2007).

[79] AN ACT ESTABLISHING A CODE OF CONDUCT AND ETHICAL STANDARDS FOR PUBLIC OFFICIALS AND EMPLOYEES, TO UPHOLD THE TIME-HONORED PRINCIPLE OF PUBLIC OFFICE BEING A PUBLIC TRUST, GRANTING INCENTIVES AND REWARDS FOR EXEMPLARY SERVICE, ENUMERATING PROHIBITED ACTS AND TRANSACTIONS AND PROVIDING PENALTIES FOR VIOLATIONS THEREOF AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES. Approved on February 20, 1989.

[80] 1987 CONSTITUTION, Article XII. Section 17.

[81] 1987 CONSTITUTION, Article XII, Section 18.

[82] Dissenting Opinion of Justice Antonio T. Carpio in G.R. No. 237428 dated May 11, 2018, pp. 6401-6404.

[83] 1987 CoNSTITUTlON, Anicie VIII, Section 4.



CONCURRING OPINION

LEONARDO-DE CASTRO, J.:

On May 11, 2018, the majority of this Court voted to grant the Petition for Quo Warranto filed by petitioner Republic of the Philippines, represented by the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG), against respondent Maria Lourdes P. A. Sereno, fundamentally based on the categorical finding of respondent's ineligibility for the position of Chief Justice in view of her failure to submit to the Judicial and Bar Council (JBC) several of her Statements of Assets, Liabilities and Net Worth (SALNs) covered within the required 10-year period, such failure means that her  integrity was not established at the time of her application for the said position. The dispositive portion of the Decision, penned by Associate Justice Noel Gimenez Tijam, reads:
WHEREFORE, the Petition for Quo Warranto is GRANTED. Respondent Maria Lourdes P. A. Sereno is found DISQUALIFIED from and is hereby adjudged GUILTY of UNLAWFULLY HOLDING and EXERClSING the OFFICE OF THE CHIEF JUSTICE. Accordingly, Respondent Maria Lourdes P. A. Sereno is OUSTED and EXCLUDED therefrom.

The position of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court is declared vacant and the Judicial and Bar Council is directed to commence the application and nomination process.

This Decision is immediately executory without need of further action from the Court.

Respondent Maria Lourdes P. A. Sereno is ordered to SHOW CAUSE within ten (10) days from receipt hereof why she should not be sanctioned for violating the Code of Professional Responsibility and the Code of Judicial Conduct for transgressing the sub judice rule and for casting aspersions and ill motives to the Members of the Supreme Court.
I wrote my Concurring Opinion to the aforementioned Decision so I could further explain my vote to deny res1Jondent's motion for my inhibition and to concur with the grant of the said Petition.

Respondent comes again before this Court through the instant Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration of the Decision dated May 11, 2018, seeking the following reliefs:
WHEREFORE, Respondent, the Hon. Chief Justice Maria Lourdes P. A. Sereno, respectfully prays that this Honorable Court:

1)
RECONSIDER the denial of Respondent's Ad Cautelam Motions for Inhibition of the Hon. Associate Justices Teresita J. Leonardo-De Castro, Diosdado M. Peralta, Francis H. Jardeleza, Noel G. Tijam, Lucas P. Bersamin, and Samuel R. Martires;


2)
RECONSIDER and SET ASIDE the Decision dated II May 2018; and


3)
DISMISS the Petition for Quo Warranto dated 2 March 2018 filed by the Office of the Solicitor General.[1]
Once more, I concur in Justice Tijam's Resolution denying respondent's motion for reconsideration, but I am compelled to write a separate Concurring Opinion to address respondent's insistence that I, along with five other Justices, should have recused ourselves from the present case allegedly due to our evident bias and the applicable grounds for our mandatory inhibition.

I reiterate that there is no factual or legal basis for respondent's motion for my inhibition.

May I stress that I testified before the House of Representatives Committee on Justice, not as a complainant, but as a resource person during the committee hearings on the determination of probable cause in Atty. Lorenzo G. Gadon's impeachment complaint against respondent. I attended in deference to the invitation of the Committee on Justice of the House of Representatives, a co-equal branch, only after securing authorization[2] from the Court en banc to testify on administrative matters and specific adjudication matters subject of the said impeachment complaint.

I have no personal knowledge of the evidentiary fact in dispute in this Petition, which is about respondent's failure to submit to the JBC her SALNs. The said fact remained hidden for a period of about six years until respondent's letter dated July 23, 2012 was revealed by JBC officials during the hearing before the Committee on Justice of the House of Representatives. Moreover, respondent refused to appear and testify personally before the said Committee to shed light on this factual matter. Neither did respondent answer my and our other colleagues' question on whether or not she filed her SALNs as professor of the University of the Philippines (UP). Respondent's consistent reply was that she would answer this question only before the Impeachment Court.

I testified before the House of Representatives Committee on Justice only on matters raised in the impeachment complaint, which were within my personal knowledge and which essentially constituted of respondent's misdeeds or misfeasance as Chief Justice, viz.:
(a) Respondent's creation of the Judiciary Decentralized Office (JDO) in the 7th Judicial Region without the knowledge and approval of the Court en banc and the falsification of a Court resolution to make it appear that the Court en banc ratified the operation of the JDO, under the pretext that she was merely reviving the Regional Court Administration Office (RCAO) in the 7th Judicial Region;

(b) Respondent's falsification and unlawful expansion of the c.overage of the Temporary Restraining Order issued in the consolidated Petitions in G.R. Nos. 206844-45 and G.R. No. 206982, Coalition of Associations of Senior Citizens in the Philippines, Inc. v. Commission on Elections,[3] in contravention of my recommendation as the Member-in-Charge;

(c) Respondent's false claim in her letter dated May 29, 2014 that several Supreme Court Associate Justices recommended to do away with Section 1, Rule 8 of JBC-009,[4] thus, depriving the Court en banc of the opportunity, under said rule, to submit its recommendees to the JBC for the vacant post of Supreme Court Associate Justice vice retired Associate Justice Roberto A. Abad, all apparently in furtherance of respondent's manipulations to block the inclusion of then Solicitor General, now Supreme Court Associate Justice Francis H. Jardeleza, in the shortlist of qualified nominees for the said vacant post; and

(d) The JBC, during respondent's incumbency as Chairperson, clustered the nominees for six simultaneous vacancies in the Sandiganbayan into six separate shortlists in violation of the Constitution; laws, rules, and jurisprudence; and the qualified nominees' rights to due process and equal opportunity to be appointed.
Indeed, my testimony could not be said to have been motivated by prejudice or personal grudge, or to be indicative of bias or partiality. My testimony before the House of Representatives Committee on Justice was objective, factual, and truthful; fully supported by official documents, including Court Decisions and issuances; substantiated by other resource persons who likewise testified before the said Committee; and more importantly, has remained unrebutted by respondent up to now. The matters I testified on were also clearly work-related and not personal, as when I called the Court en banc's attention when respondent violated Court en banc Resolutions, falsified Court Resolution, and misled or lied to us, her colleagues in the Supreme Court, on official matters.

I have vehemently denied in my Concurring Opinion to the main Decision the blatant lies about the alleged conversation that I had with respondent upon her appointment as Chief Justice.

In addition, the matters taken up during the hearings before the House of Representatives Committee on Justice concerned respondent's actuations while she held the position of Chief Justice, which might constitute impeachable offenses and did not involve respondent's qualifications for appointment to the post of Supreme Court Chief Justice. While the questioning by the Committee Members during the hearings did reveal respondent's non-submission of her SALNs for the past 10-year period to the JBC, a specific requirement for filling-up the vacant post of Chief Justice vice Chief Justice Renato C. Corona, it was a matter which the said Committee did not act upon. The issue of whether or not respondent is qualified to be Chief Justice is a totally different and separate matter from the grounds adduced in the impeachment complaint, and is appropriately within this Court's jurisdiction, raised via this Petition for Quo Warranto.

Furthermore, respondent objects to references to and discussions of the other false entries in her sworn Personal Data Sheet (PDS), which no longer involved her SALNs.

To be sure, the past action of a person is a valuable yardstick of his/her character. This is true as regards respondent who advanced in her career in the Judiciary through her lies and deceptions, which were recounted in detail in my Concurring Opinion, beginning with the false entries in the PDS she submitted when she applied for Supreme Court Associate Justice in 2010, and repeated in the PDS she submitted when she subsequently applied for Supreme Court Chief Justice in 2012.

It bears to point out that in the Resolution dated April 3, 2018 in the case at bar, the Court acted on respondent's Ad Cautelam Motion to Set for Oral Argument dated April 2, 2018 and resolved, among other things, to:
(a)
GRANT the subject Motion, not for the purpose cited therein, but for the sole purpose of granting the respondent a final opportunity to answer specific questions, under oath, needed for the judicious resolution of the instant case[.] (Emphasis mine.)
The Amended Advisory attached to the Resolution explicitly laid down the conditions and guidelines for the oral arguments, to wit:

Accordingly, without necessarily giving due course to the petition, the Oral Argument is set on April 10, 2018, 2 p.m., at the Session Hall, Supreme
Court, Baguio City. This is subject to the conditions that respondent shall: (a) personally appear and testify under oath and (b) affirm and verify under oath the truth and veracity of the allegations in the Comment filed by counsels supposedly on her behalf.

For the orderly proceeding of Oral argument, the parties are required to observe the following guidelines:

x x x x

V. The Members of the Court maintain their privilege to ask any question on any relevant matter or require submission of any document necessary for an enlightened resolution of this case. (Emphases mine.)
Respondent herself opened the door to questions as to the entries in her PDS[5] as she had attached to her Comment Ad Cautelam the nominations and endorsements for the position of Chief Justice of "various persons and groups in the legal and evangelical community." Among said attachments were the nominations of respondent by Atty. Fidel Thaddeus I. Borja[6] and Atty. Jordan M. Pizarras and Atty. Janalyn B. Gainza-Tang,[7] who mentioned respondent's credentials as a former lecturer in the University of Western Australia (UWA) and Murdoch University. Hence, it was completely within my authority as a Member of the Court to verify such matter which respondent herself put into the record, during the oral arguments. And, as my questions during the oral arguments exposed, which I discussed in my Concurring Opinion to the Decision of May 11, 2018, that respondent was not being entirely truthful in her PDS when she deliberately omitted the fact that she was a lecturer in the Masters in Business Administration (MBA) program of a Manila-based school, unnamed in her PDS, which happened to have a partnership with UWA and Murdoch University.

I likewise have a legitimate basis for questioning respondent during the oral arguments regarding her entry in her PDS that she served as Deputy Commissioner of the Commission on Human Rights (CHR). CHR officers and employees are undeniably public officers and employees mandated by the Constitution and statutes to file their SALNs. Other than verifying the veracity of respondent's purported title of CHR Deputy Commissioner, I merely intended to inquire if respondent filed her SALN during her tenure with the CHR, thus:
JUSTICE DE CASTRO:

In your PDS, you mentioned that you're a Deputy Commissioner of the Commission on Human Rights. When was that period of time? Because your PDS did not mention the year when you were a Deputy Commissioner of the Commission of Human Rights. What was the period that you served in the CHR?

CHIEF JUSTICE SERENO:

It was a functional title. I don't have the exact details because you did not ask me to prepare for my PDS, allegations on the PDS. At least I didn't see that. So...

JUSTICE DE CASTRO:

So, it was not a Position Title because the...

CHIEF JUSTICE SERENO:

It was a functional... No, no, it was a functional...

JUSTICE DE CASTRO:

Excuse me. Let me finish. The PDS has a matrix and the information required of the one accomplishing the PDS stated that you should put there your Position Title. But, so, when you accomplished that form, of the PDS, you mentioned that you were a Deputy Commissioner of the Commission on Human Rights. So the question is, is there such a position in the Commission on Human Rights?

CHIEF JUSTICE SERENO:

If you are going to look at the way the PDS was trying to condense, the Commission on Human rights succeeded the Presidential Committee on Human Rights. I was first hired with the Presidential Committee on Human Rights and given a title of Technical Consultant then a functional title of Deputy Commissioner where I could vote vice Abelardo - who was the Commissioner. Then, it morphed into the Commission on Human Rights but the terms of reference that were still to be carried over into that CHR was still to carry that because I was there for a while. I was going to explain this eventually.

JUSTICE DE CASTRO:

So, you're saying...

CHIEF JUSTICE SERENO:

And this is not, I'm sorry, Justice Tess, this is outside already of the petition.

JUSTICE DE CASTRO:

This is, let me...

So, I want to find out, are we going...

JUSTICE DE CASTRO:

This is connected...

CHIEF JUSTICE SERENO:

Is it a global roaming...

JUSTICE DE CASTRO:

No, I asked this...

CHIEF JUSTICE SERENO:

Global roaming event?

JUSTICE DE CASTRO:

No, I asked this because this is connected. I want to know if you occupy a permanent position there...


CHIEF JUSTICE SERENO:

No...

JUSTICE DE CASTRO:

...as Deputy Commissioner. So, I'd like to know whether you submitted your SALN?


CHIEF JUSTICE SERENO:

No, no, it was not permanent.

JUSTICE DE CASTRO:

So, you're now saying there's no such Position Title as Deputy Commissioner?

CHIEF JUSTICE SERENO:

No. There is.

JUSTICE DE CASTRO:

You said it's a functional title?

CHIEF JUSTICE SERENO:

Position slash functional title, they merged.

JUSTICE DE CASTRO:

What is the meaning, but there's, why...

CHIEF JUSTICE SERENO:

Maybe we need to talk to people from the Commission on Human Rights and PCHR, they can explain this in great detail including the organizational birth of PCHR morphing into the CHR and why perfectly, it is perfectly all right to use that functional title.

JUSTICE DE CASTRO:

So you...

CHIEF JUSTICE SERENO:

And the petition is only about my UP, my UP stint not my CHR stint, Justice Tess. I was not prepared, I did not bring my documents, I don't think I should be examined under these conditions.

x x x x

JUSTICE DE CASTRO:

And your PDS says that you were a Deputy Commissioner of the Commission on Human Rights. So, I'd like to know if you're a permanent official of the CHR and if so, whether you filed your SALN and I wanted to know if that was the period you resigned from UP. So, if you... That's why I...

CHIEF JUSTICE SERENO:

No, I was with UP also at the same time.

JUSTICE DE CASTRO:

So, that's why I'm asking...

CHIEF JUSTICE SERENO:

It was a UP SALN...[8] (Emphases mine.)
It was evident that during the oral arguments, respondent was very evasive as to questions concerning entries in her sworn PDS, which falsely stated that she held the position of Deputy Commissioner of the CHR, when the said position did not exist. Respondent repeatedly asserted that such entries were outside the jurisdiction of the Court, but these were actually factual matters closely related to her claimed qualifications for the posts of Associate Justice and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. These concerned personal information, if true, would have been easily answered by respondent without need for extensive review or preparation.

Lastly, it is worthy to note that up to this time, respondent has yet to provide any categorical and demonstrably truthful explanation regarding the incomplete and improper submission of her SALNs.

From the outset, the thrust of respondent's argument is that the issues raised in the Petition for Quo Warranto and the relief sought therein, i.e., her removal from office, are matters that should be taken cognizance of, not by the Court, but by the Senate sitting as Impeachment Court.

Yet, respondent's assertion that she will address the questions regarding her non-submission of SALNs before the. Senate sitting as Impeachment Court, on closer look, is duplicitous.

In her Comment Ad Cautelam, respondent .claimed that she "continues to recover and retrieve her missing SALNs and will present them before the Senate sitting as the Impeachment Tribunal[,]" but in the same breath, said statement is followed by the reservation that her presentation of the SALNs was "without prejudice to her legal defenses in light of the fact that her alleged failure to file SALNs before she joined the Supreme Court is not within the scope of the impeachment complaint or the grounds for impeachment provided in the Constitution."[9] Again, said Comment Ad Cautelam stated "x x x with most of the missing SALNs ready to be produced at the Senate Impeachment Trial, but without prejudice to the Chief Justice's objections based on jurisdiction and relevance."[10]

Respondent further insisted in her Memorandum Ad Cautelam that "only the Senate sitting as an Impeachment Tribunal may try and decide the factual issue of whether she filed her SALNs as a U.P. Professor (and only assuming arguendo that this matter - which took place before she joined the Supreme Court - may be considered an impeachable offense)."[11]

It is readily apparent that respondent has taken the position that the Senate sitting as Impeachment Court has no jurisdiction over her failure to file her SALNs, which happened before she was appointed Chief Justice. This is precisely the thrust of this Petition for Quo Warranto. The SALN issue lies at the heart of the qualification of integrity required for appointment as Chief Justice. Respondent's omission to file her SALNs was an antecedent fact or a prior factual requirement before she could qualify for appointment as Chief Justice.

The foregoing only reinforces the ruling of the Court that under the particular circumstances of this case, the remedy of quo warranto before the Supreme Court is appropriate to challenge respondent's qualifications to be Chief Justice as there can be no void in available remedies so as to hold respondent accountable for the consequences of her actions prior to her invalid appointment and assumption to the position of Chief Justice, i.e., her failure to submit to the JBC her SALNs for the 10-year period before 2012, particularly for 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, and August 24, 2010, which were explicitly required for applications for the Chief Justice vacancy in 2012, as well as her deceptive letter dated July 23, 2012 to the JBC to justify her non-submission.

As I pointed out during the Oral Arguments, if respondent succeeds in preventing the Court, and also the Senate, from looking into her SALNs, nobody will ever know whether or not she has properly complied with the constitutionally mandated obligation of the filing of SALNs.[12] Respondent's obvious defense strategy is to avoid revealing the truth about her missing SALNs whether in this Petition for Quo Warranto or in the Senate Impeachment Court.

Respondent's crafty defense strategy should not be countenanced.

Considering the foregoing, I vote to DENY respondent's Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration for utter lack of merit.


[1] Respondent's Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration, p. 203.

[2] The Court Resolution dated November 28, 2017 pertinently states:

NOW, THEREFORE, the Court En Banc hereby authorizes the invited officials and Justices to so appear and testify, if they wish to do so, under the following conditions:

x x x x

3. Justice Teresita J. Leonardo-De Castro of this Court may testifY on administrative matters, and on adjudicatory matters only in the following cases:

a. G.R. Nos. 206844-45 (Coalition of Association of Senior Citizens in the Philippines Party List v. Commission on Elections): Justice Leonardo-De Castro may testify only on the issuance of the Temporary Restraining Order and on the exchange of communications between Chief Justice Sereno and Justice Leonardo-De Castro, but not on the deliberations of the En Banc in this case;

b. G.R. No. 224302 (Hon. Philip Aguinaldo, et al. v. President Benigno S. Aquino III): Justice Leonardo-De Castro may testifY only on the merits of her ponencia but not on the deliberations of the En Banc in this case;

c. G.R. No. 213181 (Francis H. Jardeleza v. Chief Justice Maria Lourdes P. A. Sereno): Justice Leonardo-De Castro may testify only on the merits of her separate concurring opinion, but not on the deliberations of the Court in this case.

[3] 714 Phil. 606 (2013).

[4] JBC-009 was promulgated on October 18, 2000. Said rules had been superseded by JBC No. 2016-01 (the Revised Rules of the Judicial and Bar Council), which took effect on October 24, 2016, without notice to the Supreme Court en banc.

[5]Annex "A" of the Petition.

[6] Annex "7" of the Comment Ad Cautelam.

[7] Annex "8" of the Comment Ad Cautelam.

[8] TSN, April 10, 2018, pp. 161-165.

[9] Respondent's Comment Ad Cautelam, p. 60.

[10] Id. at 68-69.

[11] Respondent's Memorandum Ad Cautelam, p. 25.

[12] TSN, April 10, 2018, p. 158.



SEPARATE CONCURRING OPINION

PERALTA, J.:

Respondent Hon. Chief Justice Maria Lourdes P. A. Sereno filed an Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration, praying for the Court to set aside its May 11, 2018 Decision, which granted the Petition for Quo Warranto filed by the Office of the Solicitor General, and to reconsider the denial of her Ad Cautelam Motions for Inhibition.

Respondent raised the following grounds in support of her motion for reconsideration:
A.

The Decision is null and void, rendered in violation of Respondent's fundamental right to due process of law.


A.1.
The existence of an impartial tribunal is an indispensable prerequisite of due process.



A.2.
The six (6) disqualified Justices ought to have inhibited themselves from hearing and deciding the case. There were compelling grounds to believe that they were not impartial.




A.2.1.
The disqualification of Associate Justices De Castro, Peralta, Jardeleza, Tijam, Bersamin and Martires is mandatory, grounded on actual bias and not mere participation in the hearings held by the House Committee on Justice.




A.2.2.
The majority failed to refute actual bias on the part of Justices De Castro and Jardeleza, and did not address other grounds for mandatory disqualification present in the cases of Justices De Castro and Peralta.




A.2.3.
This Honorable Court has required inhibition of trial court judges for far lesser reasons. Established jurisprudence on the inhibition of judges should be equally applied in this case.



A.3.
The majority acted without jurisdiction and in gross violation of Respondent's right to due process when it took cognizance of extraneous matters as "corroborative evidence" of Respondent's supposed lack of integrity.



A.4.
The Petition is ultimately based on disputed questions of fact which could not have been validly resolved by the Court without observing the mandatory procedure for reception of evidence under the Rules of Court and the Internal Rules of the Supreme Court.

B.

The Decision is contrary to the Constitution. The Honorable Court is without jurisdiction to oust an impeachable officer via quo warranto.

B.1.

The indisputable intent of the Constitution is that impeachable officers, save for the President and Vice President, can be removed from office only by impeachment.




B.1.1.
Textually, impeachment is the only method for removal of appointive constitutional officers permitted under the Constitution.




B.1.2.
The intent that impeachment be exclusive is shown by the deliberations of the 1986 Constitutional Commission. It is also expressed by the views of the members of that Commission.




B.1.3.
Jurisprudence prior to the 11 May 2018 Decision consistently held that impeachment is an exclusive mode for removal from office.




B.1.4.
The use of the word "may" does not denote an alternative to impeachment.




B.1.5.
Statutes providing for removal of public officers must be strictly construed.




B.1.6.
The reasons and public policy behind impeachment as the Constitutionally-mandated mode of removal of Justices of the Supreme Court negate any other mode of removal.




B.1.7.
A difficult process deliberately chosen by the Constitution cannot be substituted with an expedient procedure.




B.1.8.
Assuming arguendo that Respondent is a de facto officer, she can still only be removed by impeachment.



B.2.

The Honorable Court should have exercised judicial restraint to avoid the possibility of a constitutional crisis.



B.3.

The Republic is guilty of forum-shopping. This Honorable Court ought to have dismissed the Petition and allowed these issues to be resolved by the proper constitutional body: the Congress.



B.4.

Respondent did not waive her jurisdictional objections.

C.

The Honorable Court seriously erred in annulling the official act of the Judicial and Bar Council ("JBC") and the President absent any allegation, much less finding of, grave abuse of discretion. The JBC's and the President's determination of Respondent's integrity is a political question beyond the pale of judicial review.

D.

Assuming the quo warranto is initially available, the petition is now time-barred.


E.

Assuming arguendo that this Honorable Court has jurisdiction, the Decision is contrary to law and evidence. The Chief justice was and is a person of proven integrity.


E.1.

The Honorable Court erred in ruling that Respondent "chronically failed to file her SALNS."



E.2.

This Honorable Court seriously erred when it ignored the JBC's standards and criteria for determining "integrity," and crafter and applied its own definition of that abstract quality.




E.2.1.
Applying the JBC's standards, criteria, and guidelines, the Respondent was able to show that she is a person of "proven integrity."




E.2.2.
The JBC never considered the filing per se of SALNs as a measure of an applicant's integrity. The SALNs were meant to be a tool to uncover the applicant's hidden cash assets, if any.



E.3.

The filing per se of a SALN neither proves nor negates a person's integrity.
The Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration should be denied for lack of merit.

I will first address respondent's arguments why the Ad Cautelam Respectful Motion for Inhibition (Of Hon. Associate Justice Diosdado M. Peralta) should not be reconsidered.

Respondent argues that I should inhibit in this case because I had expressed my view under oath that she should have been disqualified from nomination for the position of Chief Justice due to her failure to submit the JBC her SALNs for the years that she was employed as a professor at the University of the Philippines (U.P.). She points out that my statement that I would have "objected to the selection of the Chief Justice" as her failure to submit her U.P. SALNs was a "very clear deviation from existing rules," suffices to produce in the mind "a firm belief or conviction" that he had already prejudged the case. She contends that it is clear from jurisprudence that prejudgment of an issue could occur even before the case from which a judge is sought to be disqualified has been filed.

Respondent's arguments are a mere rehash of those raised in her Ad Cautelam Respectful Motion for Inhibition, which have already been addressed in my Separate Concurring Opinion, in this wise:
In saying that "had I been informed of this letter dated July 23, 2012, and a certificate of clearance, I could have immediately objected to the selection of the Chief Justice for voting because this is a very clear deviation from existing rules that if a member of the Judiciary would like ... or ... a candidate would like to apply for Chief Justice, then she or he is mandated to submit the SALNs," I merely made a hypothetical statement of fact, which will not necessarily result in the disqualification of respondent from nomination, if it would be proven that she had indeed filed all her SALNs even before she became an Associate Justice in 2010.

There is nothing in the statement that manifests bias against respondent per se as the same was expressed in view of my function as then Acting Ex-Officio Chairperson of the JBC, which is tasked with determining the constitutional and statutory eligibility of applicants for the position of Chief Justice. It would have been but rational and proper for me or anyone else in such position to have objected to the inclusion of any nominee who was not known to have met all the requirements for the subject position. The significance of his responsibility as Acting Ex-Officio Chairperson of the JBC gave rise to the imperative to choose the nominee for Chief Justice who was best qualified for the position, i.e. one who must be of proven competence, integrity, probity and independence. Be it stressed that when the hypothetical statement was made, there was no petition for quo warranto yet, so I cannot be faulted for pre-judging something that is not pending before the Court.

Besides, in my honest view, what is being assailed in this petition for quo warranto is respondent's failure to prove her integrity on the ground that she deliberately concealed from the JBC the material fact that she failed to file her SALNs for the years 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2006, among others, even before she became an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court in 2010. Thus, whether hypothetical or not, my statement that she should have been disqualified to be nominated as Chief Justice, is not relevant or material to this petition for quo warranto.

For one, in connection with her application for Associate Justice in July 2010, what the Office of Recruitment, Selection and Nomination (ORSN) received on July 28, 2010 from respondent was her un-notarized 2006 SALN dated July 2010. However, in a recent letter dated February 2, 2018 addressed to the ORSN, she explained that such SALN was really intended to be her SALN as of July 27, 2010. During the Oral Arguments, respondent further explained that she merely downloaded the SALN form, and forgot to erase the year "2006" printed thereon and that she was not required by the ORSN to submit a subscribed SALN. Assuming that her said SALN is for 2010, it should have been filed only in the following year (2011) as the calendar year 201 0 has not yet passed, and her appointment would still be in August 16, 2010. She cannot also claim that said SAL for 2009 because she was still in private practice that time.

For another, she also failed to file her SALN when she resigned from the University of the Philippines (U.P.) in 2006 in violation of R.A. No. 6713. Accordingly, whatever I testified on during the Congressional Hearings has no bearing on this petition because my concern is her qualification of proven integrity before she even became an Associate Justice in 2010, and not when she applied for Chief Justice in 2012.
Respondent also insists that she raised other mandatory grounds for my inhibition, which were not refuted, such as (1) having personal knowledge of disputed evidentiary facts; (2) having served as material witness in the matter in controversy; and (3) having acted as Acting Ex-Officio Chairperson of the JBC for the matter in controversy. She explains that as such Ex-Officio Chairperson of the JBC, I would have personal knowledge of disputed evidentiary facts concerning the proceedings; thus, my disqualification is mandated by Section S(a), Canon 3 of the New Code of Judicial Conduct and Rule 3.12(a), Canon 3 of the 1989 Code of Judicial Conduct. She asserts that my explanation to the effect that it was the Office of the Recruitment, Selection and Nomination (ORSN) of the JBC which was tasked to determine the completeness of the applicant's documentary requirements including SALNs, is in itself a personal account of what transpired during the selection of nominees for the Chief Justice position in 2012, and thus still covered by Canon 3, Section 5(a) of the New Code of Judicial Conduct. She adds that another ground for my disqualification is Section 1(f), Rule 8 of the Internal Rules of the Supreme Court because I signed the short list of nominees for the position of Chief Justice, which was transmitted to the Office of the President; thus, I acted in an official capacity on the subject matter of this case. According to her, the fact that the validity of my official action is in question, ought to have sufficed for my compulsory disqualification in this case.

Contrary to respondent's view that Section 5(a),[1] Canon 8 of the New Code of Judicial Conduct, which mandates that the inhibition of a judge who has "actual bias or prejudice against a party" is a compulsory ground for inhibition, the said ground is merely voluntary or discretionary under Rule 137[2] of the Rules of Court and Rule 8[3] of the Internal Rules of the Supreme Court, which are the applicable rules governing inhibition in this petition for quo warranto.

Respondent's supposed grounds for my mandatory inhibition are also reiterations of matters that have already been passed upon in my Separate Concurring Opinion, thus:
Contrary to respondent's contention, I have no personal knowledge of the disputed facts concerning the proceedings (e.g., the matters considered by the members of the JBC in preparing the shortlist of nominees). As can be gathered from the Minutes of the July 20, 2012 JBC En Banc Special Meeting, it is the ORSN and the JBC Execom which was given the duty to determine the completeness of the documentary requirements, including the SALNs, of applicants to judicial positions. Suffice it to state that because of my usual heavy judicial workload, it is inconceivable and impractical for me, as then Acting Ex-Officio JBC Chairperson, to examine the voluminous dossier of several applicants and determine whether they have complete documentary requirements.

Equally noteworthy is the fact that there are no disputed evidentiary facts concerning the proceedings before Congress or the Court. In the July 24, 2012 Report of ORSN regarding the Documentary Requirements and SALNs of Candidates for the Position of the Chief Justice of the Philippines, then Associate Justice Maria Lourdes P. A. Sereno was noted to have "Complete Requirements" with notation "Letter 7/23/12-considering her government records in the academe are more than 15 years old, it is reasonable to consider it infeasible to retrieve all those file." Despite her employment at the UP College of Law from November 1986 to June 1, 2006, the record of the UP Human Resources Department Office only contains her SALNs filed for 1985, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997 and 2002,[4] but her SALNs for 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005 and  2006 are not on file,[5] whereas the records of the Central Records Division of the Office of the Ombudsman reveal that no SALN was filed by respondent from 2000 to 2009, except for the SALN for 1998. Respondent neither disputes the foregoing facts nor the authenticity and due execution of the foregoing documents.

Significantly, when I was Acting Ex-Officio Chairperson in 2012, I have had no personal knowledge that respondent had not filed her SALNs for 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2006. I may have had access to her SALNs for 2009, 2010 and 2011, but it was only during the Congressional Hearings that it was discovered that she failed to file her SALNs for the period between 2000-2006, as borne by the Certifications issued by the Office of the Ombudsman and the U.P. HRDO pursuant to subpoena duces tecum issued by the Committee on Justice.

It is likewise important to distinguish the proceedings before the Committee on Justice of the House of Representatives and the quo warranto petition pending before the Court. The issue in the petition for quo warranto is whether respondent unlawfully holds or exercises a public office in view of the contention of the Solicitor General that her failure to file SALNs, without lawful justification, underscored her inability to prove her integrity which is a constitutional qualification to become a member of the Supreme Court. In contrast, the issue in the Congressional Hearings where I was invited as a Resource Person was the determination of probable cause to impeach the respondent where her qualifications prior to her appointment as Chief Justice was never an issue nor raised as ground for impeachment.
There is no merit in respondent's claim that I am compulsorily disqualified to act in this case because as then Ex-Officio Chairperson of the JBC, I signed the short list of nominees for the position of Chief Justice, and the validity of my official action is purportedly in question. Suffice it to state that there is no dispute in this case as to the validity of my act oftransmitting to the Office of the President the short list of nominees. I may have participated in the deliberation of the names included in the short list, but since respondent deliberately concealed from the JBC the material fact that she failed to file her SALNs in 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2006, I was denied the opportunity to pass upon her qualification of "proven integrity." As a matter of course, respondent's name would not have been included in the deliberation for the said short list, if only the JBC Executive Committee (Execom) and the ORSN had exercised reasonable diligence in the performance of their ministerial duty to ensure the complete documentary requirements of the applicants to the position of Chief Justice.

For all her harping on the mandatory grounds of inhibition, respondent should be well aware of what constitutes a clear case of "conflict of interest" which is a ground for recusal. In the November 17, 2017 deliberations where the JBC En Banc voted for the applicants to be shortlisted for the position of Court of Appeals Presiding Justice, respondent should not have allowed another round of voting, but should have sustained the motion of Judge Toribio Ilao, Jr. to re-open the position, considering that only two (2) of the five (5) candidates were voted by the JBC En Banc when the Constitution requires that three (3) from five (5) or more qualified candidates be voted upon. Instead, respondent insisted on are-vote among the three (3) candidates who were not initially voted upon (first in the history of the JBC), to include one applicant in the shortlist of nominees, who penned a decision reversing the ruling of the trial court, which found that the fees awarded to the lawyers (including respondent) who represented the Philippine Government in a case, were exorbitant and unenforceable for being contrary to public policy. Note that when the second round of voting took place, there was still a pending motion for reconsideration of the said applicant's decision which is favorable to respondent. It may even be said that respondent concealed such conflict of interest from the other JBC Ex-Officio members, who could have called for her inhibition as then Ex-Officio Chairperson.

In claiming that I am compulsorily disqualified from acting on this petition for quo warranto, respondent ignores the crucial distinction between the subject matter of this petition and that of the 2012 deliberations of the JBC En Banc when I acted as its Acting Ex-Officio Chairperson. Note that the subject matter of this petition for quo warranto is her ineligibility to become a member of the Judiciary because she was not a person of "proven integrity" for deliberately concealing from the JBC the fact that she had failed to file her SALNs, whereas the subject matter of the 2012 deliberations of the JBC En Banc is the overall qualifications of applicants, including respondent, to become a Chief Justice. Equally noteworthy is the fact that while there is a disputed evidentiary fact in this petition for quo warranto as to whether or not respondent had failed to file her SALNs before the Ombudsman Central Records Division or the U.P. Human Resource Department Office (HRDO), there was no disputed evidentiary fact during the JBC deliberations with respect to her SALN requirement. Then as now, however, there is no question that she had failed to file her SALNs before the JBC for so many years, including those for 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2006, but the ORSN erroneously stated in its report dated July 24, 2012 that she had "COMPLETE REQUIREMENTS [-] Letter 7/23/12 considering that her government records in the academe are more than 15 years old, it is reasonable to consider it infeasible to retrieve all those file."

Respondent further asserts that I was a material witness in the matter in controversy because I testified before the House Committee on Justice that the JBC should have disqualified her for failure to submit her SALNs for the years when she was a U.P. Professor; hence, disqualified to sit in judgment pursuant to Canon 3, Section S(b) of the New Code of Judicial Conduct and Rule 3.12(b), Canon 3 of the 1989 Code of Judicial Conduct. She claims that my opinion before the House Committee on Justice as to her invalid nomination for failure to submit SALNs to the JBC, given about a month before the petition for quo warranto was filed, might in some way or another, influence my decision in this case, because I already have personal knowledge of disputed evidentiary facts.

Respondent fails to persuade. A "material witness" is one who can testify about matters having logical connection with the consequential facts, specially iffew others, if any, know about those matters[6] For one, whether or not I will be a material witness in the impeachment proceedings would be for the prosecution panel to eventually decide. For another, as can be clearly gathered from the Minutes of the July 20, 2012 JBC En Banc Special Meeting and the transcript of the Congressional Hearings, I cannot be a material witness in the first place, because I have no personal knowledge as to whether there was substantial compliance with the SALN requirement, the determination of which having been expressly delegated to the JBC Execom. Because of my usual heavy judicial workload as an Associate Justice, it was inconceivable and impractical for me, as then Acting Ex-Officio JBC Chairperson, to examine the voluminous dossier of several applicants and determine whether they have complete documentary requirements, including SALNs.

To my mind, the material witnesses who could testify whether there was substantial SALN requirement are the members of the JBC Execom and the ORSN. On my part, I could corroborate the matters that transpired during the July 20, 2012 JBC En Banc Special Meeting, and the fact that respondent's letter dated July 23, 2012 never reached the JBC En Banc before the deadline for the submission of documentary requirements. It is also important to stress that when I was Acting Ex-Officio Chairperson in 2012, I have had no personal knowledge that respondent had not filed her SALNs for 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2006. I may have had access to her SALNs for 2009, 2010 and 2011, but it was only during the Congressional Hearings in 2018 that it was discovered that she failed to file her SALNs for the periods between 2000-2006, as borne by the Certifications issued by the Office of the Ombudsman and the U.P. HRDO pursuant to subpoena duces tecum issued by the Committee on Justice.

Even assuming that respondent's name was included in the shortlist of nominees for the position of Chief Justice submitted by the JBC to the Office of the President, there is a difference between determining her qualifications and the violation of the SALN law. Granted that there was a waiver on the part of the JBC with regard to respondent's incomplete SALNs, the fact remains that there were violations of the statutory and constitutional Jaws for failure to file SALNs, which not only cast doubt on her integrity, but also constitute culpable violation of the Constitution, and violation of R.A. Nos. 6713 and 3019 for as many years that she failed to file her SALNs. Because the said violations were committed even prior to respondent's appointment as Associate Justice of the Supreme Court in 2010, then they are proper subject of quo warranto proceedings instead of impeachment.

As to the respondent's right to due process, I have already explained in a Separate Concurring Opinion that my participation in the Congressional Hearings did not violate her right to due process, because it was never shown that I am disqualified on either compulsory or voluntary grounds for inhibition under the Rules of Court and the Internal Rules of the Supreme Court. Respondent's allegations of actual bias and partiality are unsubstantiated, conjectural, and not founded on rational assessment of the factual circumstances on which the motion to inhibit is anchored. When I made the statements before the Congressional Hearings for the determination of probable cause to impeach the respondent Chief Justice, no petition for quo warranto was filed yet before the Court, hence, I could not have pre-judged the case. Once again, the genuine issue in this petition for quo warranto is not the eligibility of respondent to be appointed as Chief Justice in 2012, but her qualification of "proven integrity" when she was appointed as an Associate Justice in 2010 despite concealment ofher habitual failure to file SALNs. Of utmost importance is the fact that I, like every other member of the Supreme Court, have never let personal reasons and political considerations shroud my judgment and cast doubt in the performance of my sworn duty, my only guide in deciding cases being a clear conscience in rendering justice without fear or favor in accordance with the law and the Constitution.

Jointly addressing the substantive issues in respondent's Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration, Irestate my position that there is nothing in Section 2, Article XI of the 1987 Constitution that states that Members of the Supreme Court, among other public officers, may be removed from office "only" through impeachment. The provision simply means than only the enumerated high government officials may be removed via impeachment, but it does not follow that they could not be proceeded against in any other manner, if warranted. Otherwise, the constitutional precept that public office is a public trust would be undermined simply because political or other Improper consideration may prevent an impeachment proceeding being initiated.

Since Section 2, Article XI of the 1987 Constitution is clear and unambiguous, it is neither necessary nor permissible to resort to extrinsic aids for its interpretation, such as the records of deliberation of the constitutional convention, history or realities existing at the time of the adoption of the Constitution, changes in phraseology, prior laws and judicial decisions, contemporaneous constructions, and consequences of alternative interpretations.[7] It is only when the intent of the framers does not clearly appear in the text of the provision, as when it admits of more than one interpretation, where reliance on such extrinsic aids may be made.[8] After all, the Constitution is not primarily a lawyer's document, and it does not derive its force from the convention that framed it, but from the people who ratified it.[9]

As a rule, an action against a public officer or employee for his ouster from office - within one year from the date the petitioner is ousted from his position[10] or when the right of the claimant to hold office arises.[11] Exception to the rule is when the petitioner was constantly promised and reassured or reinstatement, in which case laches may not be applied because petitioner is not guilty of inaction, and it was the continued assurance of the government, through its responsible officials, that led petitioner to wait for the government to fulfill its commitment.[12] Thus, I posit that the one-year prescriptive period to file a petition for quo warranto should commence from the time of discovery of the cause for the ouster from public office, especially in cases where the ground for disqualification is not apparent or is concealed.

It is not amiss to stress that under American jurisprudence, which has persuasive effect in this jurisdiction, it had been held that the power to impeach executive officers, vested in the legislature, does not affect the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to try the right to office, since such right to an office is a proper matter of judicial cognizance, and impeachment is not a remedy equivalent to, or intended to take the place of quo warranto.[13]

Contrary to respondent's claim that the burden of proof to show unlawful holding or exercise of public office rests on the petitioner in a quo warranto proceeding, the general rule under American jurisprudence is that the burden of proof is on respondent when the action is brought by the attorney general, to test right to public office. Therefore, it is the respondent, not the petitioner, who bears the burden to prove that she possessed the constitutional qualification of proven integrity when she applied for the position of Associate Justice of the Supreme Court in 2010, despite her failure to comply with the statutory and constitutional requisite of filing SALNs for the years of 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2006 while she was in government service, albeit on official leave intermittently.

In sum, the filing of Statement of Assets, Liabilities and Net Worth (SALN) is a constitutional and statutory obligation of public officers and employees. Submission of SALN is a pre-requisite of the Judicial and Bar Council for applicants to the Judiciary who come from government service. Its significance in determining the integrity of applicants to the Judiciary came to the fore when former Chief Justice Renato C. Corona was impeached for failure to properly declare assets in his SALNs. Based on the certifications issued by the University of the Philippines Human Resource Department Office and the Office of the Ombudsman Central Records Division, respondent failed to file her SALNs for the years 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2006. When respondent deliberately concealed from the JBC the fact that she failed to file her said SALNs while she was a Professor at the University of the Philippines College Law, she demonstrated that her integrity is dubious and questionable. Therefore, her appointment as an Associate Justice in August 16, 2010 is void ab initio, for she lacks the constitutional qualification of"proven integrity" in order to become a member of the Court.

WHEREFORE, I vote to DENY respondent's Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration for lack of merit.

Respectfully submitted.


[1] Section 5. Judges shall disqualify themselves from participating in any proceedings in which they are unable to decide the matter impartially or in which it may appear to a reasonable observer that they are unable to decide a matter impartially. Such proceedings include, but are not limited to instances where:

(a) The judge has actual bias or prejudice concerning a party or personal knowledge of disputed evidentiary facts concerning the proceedings. x x x

[2] Section 1. Disqualification of Judicial Officers. - No Judge or judicial officer shall sit in any case in which he, or his wife or child, is pecuniarily interested as heir, legatee, creditor or otherwise, or in which he is related to either party within the sixth degree of consanguinity of affinity, or to counsel within the fourth degree, computed according to the rules of the civil law, or in which he has been executor, administrator, guardian, trustee or counsel, or in which he has presided in any inferior court when his ruling or decision is the subject of review, without the written consent of all parties in interest, signed by them and entered upon the record.

Any judge may, in the exercise ofhis sound discretion, disqualify himself from sitting in a case, for just or valid reason other than those mentioned above.

[3] Section 1. Grounds for Inhibition. - A Member of the Court shall inhibit himself of herself from participating in the resolution of the case for any of these or similar reasons:

a) the Member of the Court was the ponente of the decision or participated in proceedings before the appellate or trial court;

a) the Member of the Court was the ponente of the decision or participated in the proceedings before the appellate or trial court;

b) the Member of the Court was counsel, partner or member oflaw firm that is or was the counsel in the case subject of Section 3(c) of this rule;

c) the Member of the Court or his or her spouse, parent or child is pecuniarily interested in the case

d) the Member of the Court is related to either party in the case within the sixth degree of consanguinity or affinity, or to an attorney or any member of a law firm who is counsel of record in the case within the fourth degree of consanguinity or affinity;

e) the Member of the Court was executor, administrator, guardian or trustee in the case; and

f) the Member of the Court was an official or is the spouse of an official or former official of the government agency or private agency or private entity that is a party to the case, and the Justice or his or her spouse has reviewed or acted on any matter relating to the case.

A Member of the Court may in the exercise of his or her sound discretion, inhibit himself of herself for a just or valid reason other than any of those mentioned above.

[4] Petitioner's Memorandum, Annex "O."

[5] Id., Annex "B."

[6] Black's Law Dictionary, Eight Edition.

[7] Statutory Construction, Ruben E. Agpalo, p. 439 (2003).

[8] People v. Muñoz, 252 Phil. 105, 118 (1989).

[9] People v. Derilo, 338 Phil. 350, 376 (1997).

[10] Madrigal v. Lecaroz, 269 Phil. 20, 24 (1990).

[11] Unabia v. City Mayor of Cebu, 99 Phil. 253 (1956).

[12] Cristobal v. Melchor, 189 Phil. 658, 1997.
 
[13] 74 C.J.S. Quo Warranto § 15.



SEPARATE OPINION

JARDELEZA, J.:

I vote to DENY respondent's Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration.

Much of the controversy surrounding this case involves the conventional wisdom (one which I myself then thought to be self-evident) that impeachment is the only mode of removing a sitting member of the Supreme Court. However, my study into, and consideration of, applicable original understanding, constitutional text and structure, case precedent and historical practice, both American and Philippine, occasioned as it was by this case, has since shown me otherwise.

Last May 11, 2018, a Majority of this Court relied on the special civil action for quo warranto to oust a sitting member of the Court, for her failure to meet a constitutional qualification. Lest there be misunderstanding, I emphasize that Our holding was neither an invention nor improvisation of existing remedies cut by this Court out of whole cloth.

On the contrary, as this Concurring Opinion will attempt to show, on the issue of jurisdiction, the majority's conclusion is supported by the following propositions:
  1. The American Constitution provides that all civil officers of the United States shall be removed on impeachment.[1] Nevertheless, the controversy of whether impeachment should be the exclusive mode to remove federal judges (including justices of the United States Supreme Court) persists in pertinent scholarly discourses,[2] case law[3] and even practice of state courts[4] on the matter. It would also take a century and a half after the Philadelphia Convention of 1787 before the United States Supreme Court would be confronted with the question. In 1937, the appointment of Justice Hugo L. Black to the American Supreme Court was questioned by a citizen by direct action on the ground that it violated the emoluments clause of the Constitution.[5] In Ex Parte Levitt, the United States Supreme Court dismissed the petition on the ground that the petitioner lacked standing, not that impeachment is the exclusive mode to unseat a sitting justice of the Court.[6] In 2009, the United States Supreme Court denied certiorari[7] and let stand a United States Court of Appeals decision denying standing to a litigant who questioned then President Barack Obama's natural born citizenship.[8]

  2. Meanwhile, while we essentially incorporated the text of the impeachment clause of the American Constitution into our 1935 Constitution,[9] this Court, in 1966 and in the context of the doctrine of separation of powers, would stake a grand constitutional principle defining the reach of judicial power respecting contests relating to the qualifications of all public officers. In Lopez v. Roxas,[10] it would hold that the power to be the judge of contests relating to, among others, the qualifications of all public officers is a power that belongs exclusively to the judicial department. The 1987 Constitution would constitutionalize this deep principle by providing that the Supreme Court, sitting en banc, shall be the sole judge of all contests relating to, among others, the qualifications of the President or the Vice­President.[11] It would also not be amiss to note that the 1934 Constitutional Convention, in a marked departure from the process under the American Constitution on the removal of members of Congress,[12] provided for an Electoral Commission for each house of the Congress, the membership of which included three justices of the Supreme Court. This Commission was mandated to be the sole judge of all contests relating to, among others, the qualifications of the Members of Congress.[13]

  3. In 2011, in In the matter of the charges of Plagiarism, etc., against Associate Justice Mariano C. Del Castillo (In re Del Castillo), twelve Members of the Court asserted the administrative authority to investigate and discipline its Members for official infractions that do not constitute impeachable offenses and mete penalties short of removal.[14]
After careful consideration and analysis of all the foregoing, I am convinced that (and contrary to respondent's claim) judicial integrity can only be preserved if the Supreme Court, in the exercise of its judicial powers, is recognized to be vested with the authority to oust and remove one of their Own, if that sitting Justice is proven to lack a constitutional qualification.

I find that the raison d'etre for the removal (with the sole or substantial participation of this Court) of the President, the Vice-President, and Members of Congress, all duly-elected high-ranking officials of the two other separate and co-equal Branches of Government, applies with equal, if not more, cogency to the case of a member of the Court whose constitutional qualification has been similarly put in issue. Since judicial power is defined to include the exclusive authority of the judicial department to judge contests relating to the qualifications of any public officer, to which class a Member of this Court undeniably belongs, perforce the Court has the authority to oust one of its Own when the Court finds that he/she lacks the qualifications required of him/her by the Constitution.

To be sure, impeachment is accurately described as a process fundamentally political in nature,[15] with the French aptly calling it "political justice."[16] So different was it from the judicial process that then Representative Gerald Ford, in furtherance of President Richard M. Nixon's aborted campaign to impeach United States Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, would cynically define an impeachable offense as "whatever a majority of the House of Representatives considers it to be at a given moment in in history."[17] Conviction by the Senate, he explained, would depend only on "whatever offense or offenses two-thirds of the other body considers... sufficiently serious to require removal of the accused from office."[18]

It is in these lights that I cast my lot with the Majority. For me, it is unnatural, even aberrant, of any Member of this Court to prefer that a case (where his or her legal qualification to the office of Justice of this Court is in issue) be decided by way of a political, rather than judicial, process.

I

Impeachment is an exceptional method of removing public officials lodged with, and exercised by, the Congress with great circumspection.[19] It is fundamentally political in nature,[20] as it involves government and the interplay of the sovereign power in removing unfit public officials vis-a-vis the state's protection of its high-level public officers.[21] From the face of Sections 1 to 3 of Article XI of the 1987 Constitution, it further discernibly appears that the main purpose of the institution of an impeachment proceeding is to exact accountability in the enumerated impeachable public officers.

As it stands now in accordance with our Constitution, in the judicial branch, it is only the Justices of the Supreme Court who are removable via impeachment.[22] In contemplation of the lengthier terms that Supreme Court justices may occupy their positions, impeachment was created as a recourse against an erring judicial officer who would otherwise remain unremoved until retirement:
To guard against the selection or retention of unfit presidents and vice­-presidents, the Constitution provides for periodic elections. Frequent and regular elections mean that if the American people are unhappy with the job that these officers are doing, or disapprove of their behavior generally, they may turn them out of office... But what about judges who engage in odious behavior, but who ostensibly hold their offices for life? To provide a means for removing civil officers who abuse their power in office, the impeachment process was devised as a grave remedy of last resort.[23]
A

The exclusivity of impeachment as a mode of removing a judicial officer, however, is far from settled. My survey of existing scholarly writing on the issue shows that there have been two main opposing views on the dispute. The first view champions the impeachment-only argument, with Hamilton,[24] Story,[25] Kent,[26] Tucker[27] and Kaufman[28] as its leading advocates. In The Federalist, No. 79, Alexander Hamilton wrote:
The precautions for [judges'] responsibility are comprised in the article respecting impeachments. They are liable to be impeached for malconduct by the House of Representatives and tried by the Senate; and, if convicted, may be dismissed from office and disqualified for holding any other. This is the only provision on the point which is consistent with the necessary independence of the judicial character, and is the only one which we find in our own Constitution in respect to our own judges. The want of a provision for removing the judges on account of inability has been a subject of complaint. But all considerate men will be sensible that such a provision would either not be practiced upon or would be more liable to abuse than calculated to answer any good purpose. The mensuration of the faculties of the mind has, I believe, no place in the catalogue of known arts. An attempt to fix the boundary between the regions of ability and inability would much oftener give scope to personal and party attachments and enmities than advance the interests of justice or the public good. The result, except in the case of insanity, must for the most part be arbitrary; and insanity, without any formal or express provision, may be safely pronounced to be a virtual disqualification.[29]
Hamilton's other Federalist writings also support a narrow reading of the above passage. In another part of the Federalist No. 79, Hamilton observed that judges "if they behave properly, will be secure in their places for life."[30] However, despite several writings expressing the narrower view of mode of removal, the American Constitution's text did not textually embrace Hamilton's position, and his writings ran contradictory to centuries of contrary convention of constitutional textual support.[31]

Irving Kaufman, a hardliner for the impeachment-only view, acknowledged the steady rise in the number of scholars who suggest that impeachment is not the only mode to effect judicial removal.[32] He opined, however, "that the very absence of a removal provision in Article III of the U.S. Constitution indicated that the Framers must have intended that bad behavior be dealt with by impeachment."[33] Kaufman added that if easier procedures for removal are appropriate for the judges in whom the Constitution vested the judicial power of the country, their independence may as well be a "snare" and a "delusion."[34]

Since impeachment and conviction entail, by design, a highly deliberative and cumbersome decision-making process, it has been argued that it would be implausible for the founders to have purposefully chosen a painstaking mechanism for disciplining judicial "Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors," then leave open to Congress or to the President the removal of federal judges on lesser grounds and less exacting means. This exclusivity view was also seen as consistent with Supreme Court decisions on the separation of powers, where it found impeachment to be the sole mechanism through which Congress may participate in decisions to remove executive officers.[35]

On the contrapositive side of the argument are those who contend that impeachment is not the exclusive mode of removing a federal judge, keeping open the legal defensibility and compelling logic of judicial modes of removal.

Burke Shartel, as echoed by Raoul Berger and Michael Gerhardt, proffer along this line of reasoning. They rest their case in large measure on the proposition that the Constitution should not be understood to have ruled out a "rational method of improving the administration of justice."[36] The main argument asserts that since there might be transgressions of the "good behavior" standard which do not rise to the level of impeachable offenses, it is not constitutionally inconceivable to have a mechanism for removal apart from impeachment for judges whose conduct are unimpeachable but nonetheless warrant removal.

In his advocacy of judicial removal of judges, Shartel stopped short of removal of Supreme Court Justices on the ground that "there is no agency in the judiciary branch to remove the Justices of the Supreme Court." He suggested instead that "perhaps Congress could confer statutory authority on the Supreme Court as a whole to remove its own offending members."[37] Shartel's reasoning was further described, thus:
He contended that the impeachment clause of Article II was a limitation on the power of the Congress to remove judges, and Article III a limitation on the executive power of removal. No constitutional limitation existed on the power of Congress to define "good behavior" in Article III and to provide a mechanism whereby the judiciary could try the fitness of its own members. In other words, judicial power to try the fitness of judges was not prohibited, though the executive was deprived of all power, and the legislature limited to impeachment. Slight support for this conclusion can be found in the case law construing Article II with respect to non-judicial civil officers; in that context, it has been held that impeachment is not the sole power of removal, as there might be conduct less than good behavior that is not a high crime or misdemeanor, for example, insanity or senility where the judge's condition is morally blameless.[38]
Berger, for his analysis, argued against the exclusivity of impeachment in this wise:
Judicial tenure "during good behaviour" was terminated at common law by bad behavior, and since impeachable offenses, that is, "high crimes and misdemeanors" are not identical with all breaches of "good behavior" but merely overlap in the case of serious misconduct, there exist an implied power to remove judges whose "misbehavior" falls short of "high crimes and misdemeanors." Traditionally, forfeiture upon a breach of a condition subsequent was a judicial function, and a forfeiture of a judicial office therefore falls within Article III "judicial power." Congress may add the forfeiture of a judicial office for misbehavior to the forfeiture jurisdiction or, if necessary, it may under the "necessary and proper" clause provide a new remedy for forfeiture of judicial office, in order to effectuate the implied power to remove a judge whose tenure was terminated by his misbehavior.

The argument that the impeachment provisions bar the way [to other modes of removal] sacrifices a necessary power to a canon of construction. With Chief Justice Marshall, I should want nothing less than an express prohibition to preclude beneficial exercise of an implied means. Those who would deny to Congress the right to select the means for the termination implicit in the constitutional text - "during good behavior" - have the burden of establishing the preclusion.
In addition, Berger, responding to the strong criticism of a judicial mode of removal of a judge which Kaufman described as one that would "pose an ominous threat to...judicial independence,"[39] and effectively be "a dragnet that would inevitably sweep into its grasp the maverick, the dissenter, the innovator," countered:
To object to the trial of a judge for misconduct, by his judicial peers drawn from the entire United States is to cast doubt on the fairness of the judicial process. If such a panel cannot be trusted to fairly try a "dissenter" for alleged judicial misconduct, no more can a district judge be trusted to try social rebels. If the process is good enough for the common man in matters of life or death, it is good enough for the trial of a judge's fitness to try others.
Berger further reckoned that, in the actual history of the impeachment power as a tool for disciplining judges who commit misdemeanors, the very tedious design of the process has in fact proven counterproductive, as it took the time of the entire Senate away from legislative duties. It had consistently been resorted to with "extreme reluctance," even in cases of the most reprehensible impropriety.[40] This, in turn, resulted in a scenario where a majority of cases of misconduct went unvisited, finally achieving an end opposite that which the Framers conceivably intended - that impeachment became a "standing invitation for judges to abuse their authority with impunity and without fear of removal." Berger further added that judicious search revealed that other leading legal luminaries on the bench, including Chief Justice Burger,[41] Justice Blackmun,[42] Justice Rehnquist,[43] and Justice Tom Clark,[44] saw proposals for judicial removal of judges as non-threats, and regarded them as constitutional.

B

While these debates have been ongoing since the time American founding fathers decided (in the Philadelphia Convention of 1759) to subject federal judges to removal by impeachment, state courts would in the meantime continue to turn to other devices (specifically, quo warranto) to oust erring judges. State legal history and jurisprudence present us with cases, dating back as early as the 1800's, where the fitness of a sitting judge was challenged through the application for a writ of quo warranto on allegations of constitutional disqualifications.[45]

In 1833, the Supreme Court of Alabama, in State Ex. Rel. Attorney Gen. v. Paul, refused to resolve the question of the right of a judge to hold the office of justice of a newly-created judicial circuit, when his appointment to the same was made by the very legislature of which the judge was a member immediately prior thereto.[46] In its application for a writ of quo warranto, the Attorney General raised, as a constitutional disqualification, the section of the State Constitution which provided "that no senator or representative shall, during the terms which he shall have been elected, be appointed to any civil office of profit, under this State, which shall have been created, or the emoluments of which shall have been increased, during such term; except such offices as may be filled by elections by the people."[47] There, the Court, after deciding that the action for writ of quo warranto was a proper proceeding, held that the separation of powers of government left the judiciary powerless to review the act of the legislature in making the appointment.[48]

Seven years later, the same issue was brought before the same State Supreme Court, in the case of State ex. rel. Attorney Gen. v. Porter.[49] Although the case became moot due to the resignation of the judge so challenged upon commencement of the proceedings, the court in Porter nevertheless took the opportunity to overrule its 1833 decision by upholding its competency to decide the constitutionality of such an appointment. It announced further that "the powers of this court not only authorize, but require it, in a proper case, to determine whether an individual, elected to the bench by the two houses of the General Assembly, possesses the constitutional qualifications for the office."[50] In Porter, the court was "entirely satisfied that the respondent was ineligible to the judgeship of the tenth circuit... and should cause a judgment of ouster to be rendered," had the issue not been rendered moot.

At the next crucial point, the case of Ex Parte Levitt[51] became most instructive. In October 1937, the appointment of Hugo L. Black to the office of Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court was similarly challenged, through a direct action to show cause,[52] filed by one Albert Levitt, a citizen and member of the bar. Prior to his appointment, Justice Black served as Senator from Alabama for over a decade, ending in his recommendation and appointment to a seat in the U.S. Supreme Court (succeeding retired Justice Willis Van Devanter) by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The petition centered on Justice Black's alleged ineligibility due to the prohibition in the Constitution under the emoluments clause.[53] On October 11, 1937, the U.S. Supreme Court dismissed Levitt's action on the ground of lack of sufficient interest in the contested office. Chief Justice Hughes, departing from familiar practice, announced from the Bench the Court's reasons for its action:
The motion papers disclose no interest upon the part of the petitioner other than that of a citizen and a member of the bar of this court. That is insufficient. It is an established principle that to entitle a private individual to invoke the judicial power to determine the validity of executive or legislative action, he must show that he has sustained or is immediately in danger of sustaining a direct injury as the result of that action and it is not sufficient that he has merely a general interest common to all members of the public.[54]
It bears stressing what the U.S. Supreme Court did not do in Levitt. Despite the received tradition that justices of the American Supreme Court can be removed from office exclusively by impeachment,[55] it did not dismiss Levitt's motion on the ground that impeachment is the exclusive mode of removing a sitting Justice of the Court. This, to me, signified that the U.S. High Court deemed itself proper to entertain a petition to remove a sitting Justice from its very own bench.

Contemporary scholarly commentary on Ex Parte Levitt[56] analyzed the various federal remedies available to those who dispute the right to occupy a public office, including habeas corpus, injunction, writ of prohibition, writ of certiorari, mandamus and quo warranto.[57] Clulow, et.al.'s central argument is: short of finding a proper party, "[t]he only other remedy which is undoubtedly available is quo warranto."[58]

As earlier stated, the U.S. Supreme Court, in the 2009 case of Berg v. Obama, denied certiorari and allowed to stand a United States Court of Appeals decision dismissing a declaratory judgment finding then­ Presidential Candidate Obama ineligible under the natural-born clause requirement of the U.S. Constitution.[59] The Court of Appeals held that plaintiff Berg, a lawyer, lacked sufficient standing, holding the door open to a list of parties "...who could have challenged, or could still challenge, Obama's eligibility through various means..."[60]

II

This Part shall discuss the development of our own Constitution's provisions on removal of public officials on issues of qualification.

In 1966, this Court, in Lopez v. Roxas,[61] was asked to resolve a petition to prevent the Presidential Electoral Tribunal, created by Republic Act No. 1793 (R.A. No. 1793) and composed of the Chief Justice and the other ten members of the Supreme Court, from hearing and deciding an election contest for the position of Vice President of the Republic of the Philippines. In dismissing the petition, We upheld the inherently judicial nature of deciding questions of qualification and said:
x x x the power to be the "judge ... of ... contests relating to the election, returns, and qualifications" of any public officer is essentially judicial. As such under the very principle of separation of powers invoked by petitioner herein - it belongs exclusively to the judicial department, except only insofar as the Constitution provides otherwise. This is precisely the reason why said organic law ordains that "the Senate and the House of Representatives shall each have an Electoral Tribunal which shall be the sole judge of all contests relating to the election, returns, and qualifications of their respective Members." In other words, the purpose of this provision was to exclude the power to decide such contests relating to Members of Congress-which by nature is judicial-from the operation of the general grant of judicial power to "the Supreme Court and such inferior courts as may be established by law."[62]
Prior to Lopez, however, there had already been textual recognition of the essentially judicial (and concededly, counter-majoritarian) nature of the process for resolving questions of eligibility/qualification of public officers.

As earlier discussed, our 1935 Constitution, for example, created an Electoral Commission to act as the sole judge of all contests relating to the election, returns, and qualifications of members of each house of the Congress.[63] In stark contrast with the process under the U.S. Constitution, which provided that each House of Congress shall be the judge of the election, returns, and qualifications of its own members,[64] our framers provided that such issues shall be decided by a nine person-tribunal, three members of whom shall come from the Supreme Court.[65] Justice Laurel, in the landmark case of Angara v. Electoral Commission,[66] noted that the Constitutional Convention sought to cure, with a body "endowed with judicial temper," the evil of the "scandalously notorious canvassing of votes by political parties."[67]

The 1973 Constitution would later give the Supreme Court not only original jurisdiction over petitions for quo warranto,[68] a grant which the Legislature cannot remove, but also the express power to discipline (and, by a vote of at least eight members, dismiss) judges of inferior courts.[69] The 1986 Constitution would contain a further provision "constitutionalizing" R.A. No. 1793 (and Lopez) by expressly empowering the Supreme Court, sitting en banc, to be the sole judge of all contests relating to the election, returns, and qualifications of the President or Vice President.[70]

In addition to the foregoing, our Constitution, in its three iterations since 1935, would also adopt provisions relating to the qualification requirements for judges, and the vetting process for the confirmation of judicial appointments, all of which bear directly on the question of whether in our jurisdiction the impeachment mode to remove judges has remained exclusive. These include: (1) the addition of the so-called moral provision to the qualifications of members of the judiciary, namely, that they be of proven competence, integrity, probity, and independence;[71] (2) the creation of a Judicial and Bar Council, which is vested with the principal function of recommending to the President appointees to the Judiciary;[72] (3) the requirement, upon assumption of office and as often thereafter as may be required by law, for all public officers and employees to submit a declaration under oath of his assets, liabilities, and net worth (SALN);[73] and, finally, (4) the grant to the Supreme Court of its so-called expanded power of judicial review, which is the duty to determine whether there has been a grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction on the part of any branch or instrumentality of the Government.[74]

To my mind, the textual recognition of the essentially judicial nature of questions of qualifications, coupled with the accumulated effect of all of the above changes to the Constitution we have surveyed, have been to create a distinctive Philippine constitutional law on impeachment and removal, respecting judges. Unlike the American constitutional provision which seems to maintain impeachment as the exclusive mode of removing judicial officials, the exigencies of our recognized need to exact accountability from public officials in general, and members of the judiciary, in particular, has led us to create a constitutional structure where the existence of the inarguably political power of impeachment against members of this Court does not necessarily preclude/exclude removal by the Court itself of its own members on issues of eligibility for failure to meet constitutionally-set qualifications.

III

Judicial independence, or the independence of the judiciary as an institution from other branches of government,[75] is said to be most crucial in "periods of intolerance."[76] Here, it has been repeatedly alleged that, by giving due course to the Solicitor General's petition for quo warranto filed against respondent, the Court may have irreparably compromised its independence for political ends. Not only does this argument have no basis other than the fact that respondent has styled herself as one of the staunchest critics of the present Administration, it also appears to operate on the erroneous premise that judicial independence is incompatible with judicial discipline.[77] On this score, I find Justice Brion's following words in In re Del Castillo to be apropos:
x x x Another interest to consider is the need for judicial integrity - a term not expressly mentioned in the Article on the Judiciary (Article VIII), but is a basic concept found in Article XI (on Accountability of Public Officers) of the Constitution. It is important as this constitutional interest underlies the independent and responsible Judiciary that Article VIII establishes and protects. To be exact, it complements judicial independence as integrity and independence affect and support one another; only a Judiciary with integrity can be a truly independent Judiciary. Judicial integrity, too, directly relates to public trust and accountability that the Constitution seeks in the strongest terms. x x x[78]
Conversely, a proscription against the Court disciplining its own members - by virtue of the argument that impeachment (undertaken solely by Congress) is the only administrative disciplinary proceeding available - is arguably counterintuitive to the spirit of judicial independence, as it ties the Court's hands from meting out the extreme penalty of removal in the disciplining of its own bench.

Indeed, while judicial independence and freedom are unquestionably desirable (if not necessary) values, judicial discipline is also equally important to ensure that the conduct of the justice system's individual judges, especially its highest magistrates, is beyond question.[79] The purpose of judicial discipline is, after all, not to punish the erring judge but more to preserve the integrity of the judicial system and safeguard the bench and the prtblic from those who are unfit.[80] Thus, and in concrete terms, our Cbnstitution sets out several disciplinary powers that necessarily capacitate[81] the Court to "keep its own house in order," and thereby preserve the integrity of the judicial system, namely: (1) admission and discipline of members of the Bar,[82] (2) contempt powers,[83] (3) discipline and removal of judges of lower courts,[84] and (4) the general power of administrative supervision over all courts and the personnel thereof.[85] Moreover, the Internal Rules of the Supreme Court (2010)[86] expressly included, for the first time, "cases involving the discipline of a Member of the Court"[87] as among those matters and cases falling within the purview of the Court en banc.[88]

There have been at least three cases of judicial discipline respecting sitting members of the Supreme Court. The most recent one is In Re: Del Castillo,[89] which involved charges of plagiarism against a sitting member of the Supreme Court and confronted the long-held debate over the disciplinary measures that may be taken against a sitting Supreme Court Justice. In her Separate Dissenting Opinion therein, Justice Carpio-Morales noted two other instances, In re Undated Letter of Biraogo and Bar Matter No. 979, wherein the Supreme Court conducted disciplinary proceedings against two Justices, both of whom were incumbent members at the time of the proceedings. While the Decisions in these cases meted penalties short of removal (in In Re Del Castillo, the Court eventually resolved to dismiss the case for lack of merit), all of them unequivocally signified an acknowledgment on the part of the Court of its power to enforce judicial discipline within its ranks. To me, the underlying principles supporting a recognition of such power on the part of the Court is no different from those that support a finding of a power to inquire into (and decide) issues of its own members with respect to constitutionally-set qualifications.

On another note, I disagree with the view of Justice Leonen, as expressed in his Dissent, that vesting in the Court the power to oust one of its Own could result to dissenters being targeted for judicial removal. With respect, for me, this argument proceeds from the erroneous premise that judicial accountability and the power of dissent cancel each other out. As shown by history, judicial discipline and accountability have always held the line to safeguard both institutional and individual judicial independence, and to impute that the freedom of dissent will be negated by the option of judicial removal is a precarious fallacy of unwarranted assumptions.

In converse truth, the very existence of the elbow room for dissent owes itself in large measure to judicial accountability, inasmuch as dissents continuously ensure that no one sitting magistrate may stifle the voice of another who is moved to "show why the judgment of his fellows are worthy of contradiction."[90] Disabusing the Court from the notion that judicial unanimity was required for legitimacy, the subsequent and prevailing tradition has since been to allow dissenting opinions to serve many utilities, including: (1) leading the majority opinion to sharpen and polish its initial draft; (2) attracting public attention for legislative change; and (3) giving the Court the farsighted contingency to correct its mistake in case of a future opportunity.[91]

A dissenter has indeed been described as one whose opinion 'speak[s] to the future... his voice... pitched to a key that will carry through the years,[92] "recording prophecy and shaping history."[93] Most dissents that have become the majority opinion in later years have also proven right by Chief Justice Hughes' elegant definition of the same when he said "a dissent in a court of last resort is an appeal to the brooding spirit of the law, to the intelligence of a future day, when a later decision may possibly correct the error into which the dissenting judge believes the court to have been betrayed."[94]

These celebrated dissents were made possible through the synergized efforts of striving for judicial independence without sacrificing the system's corporate and individual integrity. Judicial accountability provided a court environment conducive for the flourishing of dissents by serving as the constant check for abuse and intimidation. It has made vastly more difficult any given majority of a multi-membered court to gag their colleagues into concession or silence. It has made space for the glorious dissents of Justice Curtis in Dred Scott,[95] Justice Harlan in Plessy,[96] and Justice Jackson in Korematsu,[97] to be heard. I find that the claim that the exercise of the general supervision of the Court over its own members would equate to silencing of dissent unduly underestimates the good faith and good sense of the Members of the Court.

Judicial accountability and integrity operatively protect all types of dissent, whether self-seeking or sincere, whether truly intuitive of future wisdom or merely self-consciously done for the sake of itself. It safeguards dissents whether borne out of honest convictions or self-perpetuation. What remains to be seen is verifiable empirical proofto substantiate the belief that the dissenting voice has been persecuted in the historical experience of judicial removal; an unease that seems to be more apparent than it is real.[98] There is only therefore a cognitive leap between judicial options for removal and stifling of dissent, as judicial accountability and integrity give dissent a protected platform and a breathing room, a voice that warrants the belief of authenticity.

Conclusion

It is not difficult to concede that the impeachment-only argument is popular, especially if the Constitution is understood as a restricted enumeration of powers.[99] As I stated in the outset, I myself previously thought its premises to be correct. The reality, however, is that, prior to this case, there has been no factual occasion for the examination (or rejection) of the plausibility of the impeachment-only view in the context of an actual case and controversy involving an incumbent Justice of the Supreme Court, where this exclusive view could be tested on all accounts.[100] Thus, while it is not hard to imagine how the impeachment-only argument respecting our country's highest ranking judicial magistrates might be accepted as resolved, this case has forced us to look more closely into its historical, legal, and logical bases. Upon doing so, I am convinced that impeachment is not an exclusive mode of removal respecting justices of the Supreme Court, respecting their constitutional qualifications.

I am further convinced that this reading gives more life to the Constitution's promise of accountability of public officers, not excluding the Court's own. I thus affirm my non-recusal and concurrence to the analysis of the ponencia and Justice De Castro on why, under the facts, respondent's integrity was not proven on account of her repeated failures to file her SALNs. The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court is the highest fiduciary in the Judicial Branch of the government. The discharge of the fiduciary duties of the Chief Justice, respecting her obligation to file her SALNs, is thus not measured by the standard applicable to Doblado.[101] Rather, in the words of Judge Cardozo, "Not honesty alone, but the punctilio of an honor the most sensitive, is... the standard ofbehavior."[102]

FOR ALL THE FOREGOING REASONS, I vote to DENY respondent's Ad Cautelam Motion for Reconsideration.


[1] U.S. CONSTITUTION, Article II, Section 4.

[2] See Saikrishna Prakash and Steven D. Smith, How to Remove a Federal Judge, 116 Yale L. J. 72 (2006).

[3] Chandler v. Judicial Council of the Tenth Circuit, 398 U.S. 74 (1970).

[4] See Commonwealth v. Fowler, 10 Mass. 290 (1813); see J.F.D., The Missouri Supreme Judgeship, Conflict between Executive and Judiciary. Powers of  Constitutional Convention. Quo Warranto, The American Law Register (1852-1891), Vol. 13, No. 12, New  Series Volume 4 (Oct., 1865), p. 719.

[5] U.S. CONSTITUTION, Article I, Section b; see The Ineligibility Clause's Lost History: Presidential Patronage and Congress, 1787-1850, Harv. L. Rev., Vol. 123, No. 7, May 2010; Paul R. Lieggi, The Ineligibility Clause; An Historical Approach to Its Interpretation and Application, 14 J. Marshall L. Rev. p. 819 (1981); Richard David Hofstetter, Survey of Constitutional Law, Part I: Special Legislation of Ineligibility Clause, 31 Rutgers L. Rev. p. 388 (1978).

[6] 302 U.S. 633 (1937).

[7] Berg v. Obama, 555 U.S. 1126 (2009); Berg v. Obama, 555 U.S. 1134 (2009).

[8] Berg v. Obama, 586 F.3d 234, 242 (2009).

[9] 1935 CONSTITUTION, Article IX, Section 1.

[10] G.R. No. L-25716, July 28, 1966, 17 SCRA 756.

[11] 1987 CONSTITUTION, Article VII, Section 5.

[12] U.S. CONSTITUTION, Article I, Section 5.

[13] 1935 CONSTITUTION, Article VI, Section 11.

[14] A.M. No. 10-7-17-SC, February 8, 2011, 642 SCRA 11, 76 (Concurring Opinion of J. Abad).

[15] Alexander Hamilton, The Federalist No. 65.

[16] Bernas, S.J., The Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines-A Commentary (1996), p. 989.

[17] Laurence Tribe and Joshua Matz, To End A Presidency (2018), p. 25.

[18] Id. at 25-26.

[19] A more detailed discussion on impeachment is attached as Appendix A.

[20] Alexander Hamilton, The Federalist No. 65.

[21] This power was given to the most political of the branches of government because of sound and practical considerations on the nature of impeachment. Originally, the Framers of the American Federal Constitution considered placing the impeachment power with the Federal Judiciary. However, this plan was discarded because the Constitutional Framers felt that the Legislature was the most "fit depositary of this important trust" and it was doubted if the members of the Supreme Court "would possess the degree of credit and authority" to carry out its judgment if it conflicted with Congress' authority.

[22] In the U.S., federal judges are also impeachable officers.

[23] Emily Field Van Tassel and Paul Finkelman, Impeachable Offenses-A Documentary History from 1787 to Present, Congressional Quarterly Inc., 1999, pp. 2-3.

[24] The Federalist Nos. 78 and 79.

[25] J. Story, Commentaries on the Constitution, §§ 1599-1635 (1833).

[26] J. Kent, Commentaries on American Law, XIV (1826).

[27] St. G. Tucker, w. Blackstone, Commentaries, 353, 359-60 (App.) (Tucker ed. 1803).

[28] See Irving R. Kaufman, Chilling Judicial Independence, in Benjam N. Cardozo Memorial Lectures Delivered at the Association of the Bar of the City of New York (1996).

[29] Supra note 24 at 474.

[30] Saikrishna Prakash and Steven D. Smith, How to Remove a Federal Judge, 116 Yale L.J. 72, 120 (2006), citing The Federalist No. 79.

[31] Id.

[32] Irving R. Kaufman, Chilling Judicial Independence, in Benjamin N. Cardozo Memorial Lectures Delivered at the Association of the Bar of the City of New York, p. 1190 (1996).

[33] Id. at 1191.

[34] Id.

[35] Peter M. Shane, Who May Discipline or Remove Federal Judges? A Constitutional Analysis, 209 U. Pa. L. Rev. 142, 209 (1993), citing Bowsher v. Synar, 478 U.S. 714, 722-23 (1986) (finding that officers of the United States can be removed "only upon impeachment by the House of Representatives and conviction by the Senate"); Myers v. United States, 272 U.S. 52, 114-15, 170 (1926) (quoting with approval President Coolidge's statement that "[t]he dismissal of an officer of the Government ... other than by impeachment, is exclusively an executive function").

[36] Preble Stolz, Disciplining Federal Judges: Is Impeachment Hopeless, 57 Cal. L. Rev. 659, p. 660 (1969).

[37] Supra note 35.

[38] Preble Stolz, Disciplining Federal Judges: Is Impeachment Hopeless, supra at 661.

[39] Irving R. Kaufman, Chilling Judicial Independence, in Benjamin N. Cardozo Memorial Lectures Delivered at the Association of the Bar of the City of New York, p. 1183.

[40] Raoul Berger, Chilling Judicial Independence: A Scarecrow, 64 Cornell L. Rev. 822, 825 (1979).

[41] Id., citing Nomination of Warren E. Burger, of Virginia, to be Chief Justice of the United States: Hearings Before the Senate Comm. On the Judiciary, 91st Cong., 1st Sess. 11 (1969).

[42] Id., citing Nomination of Harry A. Blackmun, of Minnesota, to be Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States: Hearings Before the Senate Comm. On the Judiciary, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. 52 (1970).

[43] Id., citing The Independence of Federal Judges: Hearings Before the Subcomm. On Separation of Powers of the Senate Comm. On the Judiciary, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. 330 (1970) (statement of W. Rehnquist, Asst. Attorney General of the United States).

[44] Id., citing Clark, Judicial Self Regulation - Its Potential, 35 L. & Contemp. Probs. 37, 40-41 (1970).

[45] Ernest E. Jr. Clulow; Lester M. Ponder; Harry C. Nail; Garfield O. Anderson, Constitutional Objections to the Appointment of a Member of a Legislature to Judicial Office: Remedies: Interest of Parties: Authority to Determine the Issue, 6 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 46 (1937). A more detailed discussion on quo warranto is attached as Appendix B.

[46] Id., citing State Ex. Rel. Attorney Gen. v. Paul, 5 Stew. & P. 40 (1833).

[47] Id., citing the Constitution of Alabama, Article 3, Section 25.

[48] Id.

[49] Ernest E. Jr. Clulow, et al., Constitutional Objections to the Appointment of a Member of a Legislature to Judicial Office: Remedies: Interest of Parties: Authority to Determine the Issue, supra; 1 Ala. 688 (1840).

[50] Id.

[51] 302 U.S. 633 (1937).

[52] Ernest E. Jr. Clulow, et al., Constitutional Objections to the Appointment of a Member of a Legislature to Judicial Office: Remedies: Interest of Parties: Authority to Determine the Issue, supra note 45, Appendix A.

[53] This clause, found under Article I, Section 6, cl. 2. of the U.S. Constitution, provided that no Senator or Representative, during the time for which he was elected, should be appointed to any civil office of the United States, which was created, or the emoluments of which were increased during the appointee's term.

[54] 303 U.S. 633 (1937).

[55] U.S. CONSTITUTION, Article II, Section 4.

[56] Ernest E. Jr. Clulow, et al., Constitutional Objections to the Appointment of a Member of a Legislature to Judicial Office: Remedies: Interest of Parties: Authority to Determine the Issue, supra note 45.

[57] Id. at 48-57.

[58] Id. at 52. Emphasis supplied.

[59] Berg v. Obama, 555 U.S. 1126 (2009); Berg v. Obama, 555 U.S. 1134 (2009).

[60] Berg v. Obama, 586 F.3d 234, 242 (2009).

[61] Supra note 10. Emphasis in the original.

[62] Id.

[63] Bernas, S.J., The 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines: A Commentary (2003), p. 725.

[64] Id.

[65] Six of the other Members were to be chosen by the National Assembly, three of whom shall be nominated by the party having the largest number of votes, and three by the party having the second largest number of votes therein (1935 CONSTITUTION, Article VI, Section 4).

[66] 63 Phil. 170 (1936).

[67] See Bernas, S.J., The 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines: A Commentary (2003), p. 726, citing 63 Phil. 170 (1936).

[68] 1973 CONSTITUTION, Article X, Section 5(1). A more detailed discussion on Quo Warranto is attached as Appendix B.

[69] 1973 CONSTITUTION, Article X, Section 7.

[70] 1986 CONSTITUTION, Article VII, Section 4.

[71] Article VIII, Section 7.

[72] Article VII, Section 8(1) and (5) and Section 9.

[73] Article XI, Section 17.

[74] Article VIII, Section 1.

[75] Irving R. Kaufman, Chilling Judicial Independence, in Benjamin N. Cardozo Memorial Lectures Delivered at the Association of the Bar of the City of New York (1996), p. 1209.

[76] Id. at 1211.

[77] It is recognized that a number of commentators have asserted arguments demonstrating the exclusivity of impeachment as a political device for judicial discipline, with three factors supposedly mandating that conclusion: (1) the Constitution's failure to authorize expressly any disciplinary procedure other than removal, (2) the ideal of judicial independence embodied in Article III, and (3) the contemporary statements such as the above quoted passages from The Federalist and the Letters of Brutus regarding the exclusivity of impeachment as a removal device.

If followed categorically, however, such an analysis would leave the government with no procedural avenue other than impeachment for disciplining sitting judges guilty of misconduct, and no disciplinary sanctions other than removal and disqualification for punishing such judges. The net effect of this line of thought, among others, is a scenario wherein the Supreme Court's hands are tied, and it relegated to "watch helplessly-for the reason that the power to act is granted solely to Congress under the express terms of the Constitution-as its own Members prostitute its integrity as an institution." (Separate Concurring Opinion of Justice Brion, In re Del Castillo, supra note 14 at 64-65).

Such an interpretation would also be inconsistent with the accepted standards for removal of a judge, and the fact that removal is not the only price exacted for every incident of judicial misconduct. This contrary understanding eliminates the demonstrated spectrum of possible misconduct, as well as the gradations of sanctions that correspond to them, and further implies that the justice is only either perfect/incapable of misstep or that the Court has to wait for the gravest of transgressions before an erring Justice can be subject to discipline. This would, in turn, inarguably mean that the Framers of the Gonstitution have conceded the condonation and tolerance of misdemeanors and misconduct of judicial officers that do not tilt the scales in equal weight as those offenses of impeachable gravity.

Viewed from the lens of the doctrine of separation of powers among the three equal branches of government, a state's highest court must necessarily possess the inherent power to all its judges, including those of them on the highest court, for to deny a state's highest court the power to discipline all its members would be to deny such a court equality with the other two branches. These conclusions are likewise buttressed by the argument that forms of discipline that depend on the judiciary for their effectuation do not threaten the separation of powers. The basic idea behind separation of powers is that the three great branches of government must be separate, coordinate and equal, (Id., citing Humphrey's Ex'r v. United States, 295 U.S. 602, 629-30 (1934), with each branch free to function without restriction, s)lpervision or interference by the other two branches. (Id., citing Carrigan, Inherent Powers and Finance, 7 TRIAL 22 (Nov./Dec. 1971). The separation of powers doctrine implies that each branch of government has inherent power to "keep its own house in order," absent a specific grant of power to another branch, sµch as the power to impeach. (Id., citing Comment, The Limitations of Article III on the Proposed Judicial Removal Machinery: S. 1506, 118 PA. L. REV. 1064, 1067-68 (1970) [hereinafter cited as LIMITATIONS OF ARTICLE III].) It recognizes that each branch of government must have sufficient power to carry out its assigned tasks and that these constitutionally assigned tasks will be performed properly within the governmental branch itself. (Id., citing Traynor, Who Can Best Judge the Judges, 53 VA. L. REV. 1266 (1967) [hereinafter cited as Traynor].

[78] Separate Concurring Opinion of Justice Brion, In re Del Castillo, supra note 14 at 62.

[79] Lisa L. Lewis, Judicial Discipline, Removal and Retirement, 1976 Wis. L. Rev. 563, 563 (1976).

[80] Cynthia Gray, A Study of State Judicial Discipline Sanctions, Am. Jud. Soc. (2002). See also Robin Cooke, Empowerment and Accountability: The Quest for Administrative Justice (1992) 18 Commonwealth Law Bulletin 1326; Lisa L. Lewis, Judicial Discipline, Removal and Retirement, Wis. L. Rev. p. 563 (1976), citing Courts-Judicial Removal-Establishment of Judicial Commission/or Removal of Judges Precludes Legislative Investigation of Judicial Misconduct, 84 Harv. L. Rev. pp. 1002-1005 (1971). Judicial Integrity, 44 J. Am. Jud. Soc. P. 165 (1961).

[81] This inherent power in administrative discipline is elucidated b Justice Brion in his Separate Concurring Opinion, In re Del Castillo, supra note 14 at 65 to wit:
Independent of the grant of supervisory authority and at a more basic level, the Supreme Court cannot be expected to play its role in the constitutional democratic scheme solely on the basis of the Constitution's express grant of powers. Implied in these grants are the inherent powers that every entity endowed with life (even artificial life) and burdened with responsibilities can and must exercise if it is to survive. The Court cannot but have the right to defend itself to ensure that its integrity and that of the Judiciary it oversees are kept intact. This is particularly true when its integrity is attacked or placed at risk by its very own Members - a situation that is not unknown in the history of the Court.
[82] CONSTITUTION, Article VIII, Section 5(5); RULES OF COURT, Rules 138 and 139-B.

[83] RULES OF COURT, Rule 71.

[84] CONSTITUTION, Article VIII, Section 11; RULES OF COURT, Rule 140.

[85] Cynthia Gray, A Study of State Judicial Discipline Sanctions, American Judicature Society (2002); available at www.ajs.org/ethics/pdfs/Sanctions.pdf.

[86] A.M. No. 10-4-20-SC, May 4, 2010.

[87] Rule 2, Sec. 3, par. (h), A.M. No. 10-4-20-SC, May 4, 2010.

[88] Elucidating on the procedure, Section 13, Rule 2 of the Court's Internal Rules provides:

Sec. 13. Ethics Committee. - In addition to the above, a permanent Committee on Ethics and Ethical Standards shall be established and chaired by the Chief Justice, with following membership:

a) a working Vice-Chair appointed by the Chief Justice;

b) three (3) members chosen among themselves by the en banc by secret vote; and

c) a retired Supreme Court Justice chosen by the Chief Justice as a non-voting observer-consultant.

The Vice-Chair, the Members and the Retired Supreme Court Justice shall serve for a term of one (1) year, with the election in the case of elected Members to be held at the call of the Chief Justice.

The Committee shall have the task of preliminarily investigating all complaints involving graft and corruption and violations of ethical standards, including anonymous complaints, filed against Members of the Court, and of submitting findings and recommendations to the en banc. All proceedings shall be completely confidential. The Committee shall also monitor and report to the Court the progress of the investigation of similar complaints against Supreme Court officials and employees, and handle the annual update of the Court's ethical rules and standards for submission to the en banc. (Emphasis and underscoring supplied).

[89] A.M. No.10-7-17-SC, October 12, 2010, 632 SCRA 607.

[90] Dissenting Opinions, University of Pennsylvania Law Review and American Law Register, Volume 1, No. 3, March 1923, p. 206. See also Evan A. Evans, Dissenting Opinion-Its Use and Abuse, 3 Mo. L. Rev. (1938), citing Georgia v. Brailsford, 2 U.S. 2 Dall. 415, 415 (1793).

[91] Ruth Bader Ginsburg, The Role of Dissenting Opinions, Presentation to the Harvard Club of Washington, D.C., on December 17, 2009, pp. 3, 4, 6.

[92] Bernice B. Donald, The Intrajudicial Factor in Judicial Independence: Reflections on Collegiality and Dissent in Multi-Member Courts, available at www.memphis.edu/law/documents/donald/pdf, last accessed on June 6, 2018, citing Benjamin Cordozo, Law & Literature, p. 36 (1931).

[93] Ferguson v. Moore-McCormack Lines, 352 U.S. 521, 528 (1957).

[94] Randall T. Shepard, Perspectives: Notable Dissents in State Constitutional Cases-What Can Dissents Teach Us, 68 Alb. L. Rev. 337 (2005), citing C. Hughes, The Supreme Court of the Unites States, 68 (1921).

[95] Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 U.S. 393, 564-633, (1857), Curtis, J. dissenting.

[96] Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537, 552-62 (1896), Harlan, J. dissenting.

[97] Korematsu v. United States, 323 U.S. 214, 242-48 (1944), Jackson, J. dissenting.

[98] There appears to be neither historical evidence nor contemporary commentary offered to show any single instance of judicial removal founded on the concerned judge's propensity to dissent

[99] Saikrishna Prakash and Steven D. Smith, How to Remove a Federal Judge, 116 Yale L.J. 72, 135 (2006). Available at: http://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/ylj/vol116/iss1/2.

[100] Id. at 136.

[101] Concerned Taxpayer v. Doblada, Jr., A.M. No. P-99-1342, September 20, 2005, 470 SCRA 218.

[102] Meinhard v. Salmon, 249 NY 458 (1928).



Impeachment: History and Rationale

Impeachment is an exceptional method of removing public officials lodged with and exercised by the Congress with great circumspection. It is widely considered sui generis and characteristically political, with penal and judicial attributes.[1] It is an extraordinary means of removal exercised by the legislature over impeachable officials, with the purpose of "ensuring the highest care in their indictment and conviction and the imposition of special penalties in the case of a finding of guilt."[2] The purpose of impeachment is to remove an officer who is no longer fit to occupy the office so held, and shall not extend further, although proper prosecution, trial and punishment according to law are not foreclosed.[3]

The principle that public office is a public trust is the core principle of the impeachment power with its primary objective the removal from office and disqualification of the public officer, who is deemed unfit. This mechanism was installed by the pragmatic consideration that men in public office might fail to discharge their duties in the manner befitting of their posts.[4] As clarified in the deliberations of the Constitutional Commission of 1986 on the impeachment provision:
MR. REGALADO. Just for the record, what would the Committee envision as a betrayal of the public trust which is not otherwise covered by the other terms antecedent thereto?

MR. ROMULO. I think, if I may speak for the Committee and subject to further comments of Commissioner de los Reyes, the concept is that this is a catchall phrase. Really, it refers to his oath of office, in the end that the idea of a public trust is connected with the oath of office of the officer, and if he violates that oath of office, then he has betrayed that trust.

x x x x

MR. DE LOS REYES. The reason I proposed this amendment is that during the Regular Batasang Pambansa when there was a move to impeach then President Marcos, there were arguments to the effect that there is no ground for impeachment because there is no proof that President Marcos committed criminal acts which are punishable, or considered penal offenses. And so the term "betrayal of public trust" is a catchall phrase to include all acts which are not punishable by statutes as penal offenses but, nonetheless, render the officer unfit to continue in office. It includes betrayal of public interest, inexcusable negligence of duty, tyrannical abuse of power, breach of official duty by malfeasance or misfeasance, cronyism, favouritism, etc to the prejudice of public interest and which tend to bring the office into disrepute. That is the purpose, Madam President.[5]
It is also fundamentally political in nature,[6] with the French even calling it "political justice"[7] as it "involves government and the arching interplay of interests the interest of the sovereign in removing unfit public officials versus the state interest in protecting high-level public officers."[8] From the face of Sections 1-3 of Article XI of the 1987 Constitution, it further discernibly appears that the main purpose of the institution of an impeachment proceeding is to exact accountability in the enumerated public officers.

The impeachment process in the Philippines traces its origins back to the American law on impeachment, which was in turn borrowed from the English parliament practice, thus making the law on impeachment common law in origin.[9] Impeachment began in the late fourteenth century when the Commons found the need to prosecute before the Lords offenders and officers of the Crown.[10] The parliament of Great Britain developed the impeachment process to be able to exercise some measure of control over the King and officials who operated under his authority. It sought to prosecute ministers of the King, who with near absolute power would have been untouchable; thereby putting the parliamentary supreme.[11] It was further described as "the most powerful weapon in the political annory, short of civil war,"[12] largely viewed as a means for the ouster of corrupt officers, and was for the English "the chief institution for the preservation of the government".[13] It was also initially not limited to removal from office, but included the imposition of all sorts of punishment, including sentencing people to death.[14] In its English advent, it was an expansive parliamentary tool of criminal prosecution and punishment, meant to be a drastic remedy, "essential but dangerous," to be used only in "imperative cases."[15]

The Founders conceived impeachment chiefly as a "bridle" upon the President and his officers,[16] a heavy "piece of artillery" as to be "unfit for ordinary use".[17] Hamilton further elucidated that impeachment was "designed as a method of national inquest into the conduct of public men" and could result in a sentence of doom "to a perpetual ostracism from the esteem and confidence, and honors and emoluments of his country". The impeachment standard appears to be purposively burdensome, designed to limit impeachment to only the gravest kinds of errors of a political nature that is directed against the state.[18] The process was entrusted to the Senate rather than the Supreme Court because the "awful discretion which a court of impeachment must necessarily have, to doom to honor or to infamy the most confidential and the most distinguished characters of the community, forbids the commitment of the trust to a small number of persons".[19]

When the English parliament practice was borrowed by the American Framers, the latter appropriated impeachment as the political weapon and remedy against executive tyranny. Impeachment was deemed "indispensable" to fend against "the incapacity, negligence or perfidy of the chief Magistrate".

Acts constituting grounds for impeachment

The offenses covered as grounds by impeachment are those that are political in nature. The political offenses, as differentiated from criminal offenses, were described as those that "proceed from the misconduct of public men, or in other words, from the abuse or violation of some public trust. They are of a nature which may with peculiar propriety be denominated political, as they relate chiefly to injuries done immediately to the society itself."[20] According to Justice Joseph Story in his Commentaries on the Constitution in 1833:
The acts covered by impeachment are therefore enlarged in operation, and reaches what are aptly termed po1itical ofiense, growing out of personal misconduct or gross neglect, or usurpation, or habitual disregard of the public interests, various in their character, and so indefinable in their actual involutions, that it is almost impossible to provide systematically for them by positive law. They must be examined upon very broad and comprehensive principles of public policy and duty. They must be judged by the habits and rules and principles of diplomacy, or departmental operations and arrangements, of parliament practice, of executive customs, and negotiations, of foreign as well as domestic political movements; and in short, by a great variety of circumstances, as well as those which aggravate as those which extenuate or justify the offensive acts which do not properly belong to the judicial character in the ordinary administration of justice, and are far removed from the reach of municipal jurisprudence.[21]
A similar view was articulated by Judge Lawrence who described impeachment as a proceeding for removal of any officer "who fills his office in a way detrimental to the public interest," which presumes that impeachable offenses cover official acts carried out during incumbency.[22] Impeachable offenses have also been believed to cover (1) criminal offenses, (2) political offenses, and (3) any breach of either type of duty implies an offense which gives rise to an impeachment.[23]

Majority of the debate as to the breadth and scope of impeachable offenses dwell on whether impeachable offenses may cover only acts that are official in character, or also those that are done in personal capacity. With respect to whether acts that may constitute grounds for impeachment are limited to those committed during incumbency in the position from which the official is sought to be impeached, or whether it may extend to acts done prior to assumption into office, a reading of the Constitutional Commission deliberations, as well as historical supportive discussions on the origin of impeachment suggest that the acts constitutive of impeachment grounds are those that are done during incumbency.

Additional historical basis that may support this is the original conception of impeachment of judicial officers, i.e. to terminate their tenure on account of bad behavior, which reasonably implies that the act which must trigger the termination of tenure must necessarily be one committed during the tenure sought to be terminated.

Impeachment of Judicial Officers

Americans were originally familiar with three models of judicial accountability to political authority. These were systems by which judges could be removed (I) by the Executive at will,[24] (2) by the Executive upon "address" from the legislature,[25] or (3) by legislative bodies through impeachment. One of the major grievances of the English was the vulnerability of judges to at-will discharge by the Stuart monarchs, which prevailed throughout most of the 17th century.[26]

Regarding impeachment as a mode of removing federal judges, it has been universally considered as an ineffective method of discipline, "illusory"[27] at best, mainly due to the fact that it had been used for political ends. It has likewise been criticized as an inadequate device for removal largely due to practical imperfections of the actual process,[28] including the legislators' lack of time or training for the role of a judge in a trial-like proceeding.[29] Legislative removal proceedings were also largely subject to broad publicity which tended to expose the challenged judge to unwarranted conclusions without the benefit of actual parliamentary determination of guilt.[30]

The earliest version of the process as invoked for the removal of judicial officers contemplated offenses that were considered departures from "good behavior"[31] that merited the end of the judge's tenure.[32] It is held that an office held "during good behavior" is terminated by the grantee's misbehavior, through the execution of a rational device for removal.[33] The English practice refrained from referring to "good behavior" as something to be determined by the impeachment process in the courts or before bodies specifically designated as the adjudicators of misbehavior. Instead, the authorities who addressed the issue referred to a judicial process. The English law provided a proceeding to forfeit the office by a writ of scire facias.[34] The function of this writ was explained by Burke Shartel in this wise:
The English Constitution knew certain judicial proceedings for the forfeiture of office. Judges, and other officers, holding good behavior by patent from the King, were removable by scire facias in the King's Bench... The causes of forfeiture were misconduct and neglect of duty; and the judgment of ouster, essential to complete the forfeiture, was not difference in substance and effect from a judgment ofremoval.[35]
This writ was the remedy to repeal a patent in case of forfeiture.[36] Several examples in history also seem to illustrate that judges saw trial by judges as the familiar and preferred remedy over trial before the Parliament.[37] In 1628, Sir John Walter, the Chief baron of the Exchequer, refused to surrender his patent of appointment on the ground that he should not be removed except through a proceeding on scire facias.[38] In 1672, Sir John Archer, a Justice of the Common Pleas similarly refused to surrender his patent of appointment without the benefit of scire facias.[39] Finally, in 1806, Lord Chancellor Erskine, on whether to resort to trial before the parliament for the removal of Justice Luke Fox of Common Pleas in England, summarized the rationale behind the preference as such: "Were their Lordships afraid to trust the ordinary tribunals upon this occasion, to let the guilt or innocence of the honorable judge be decided ... upon a scire facias to repeal the patent by which he held his office?"[40]

These repeated preferences of trial by fellow judges than by parliament appear to exhibit that English judges historically regarded judicial removal as a "privilege," and not an impairment of their independence.[41]


[1] Antonio R. Tupaz an Edsel C.F. Tupaz, Fundamentals on Impeachment, (2001), pp. 6-8.

[2] Isagani Cruz, Phili rpine Political Law, (1989 ed.), pp. 313-314.

[3] Section 7, Article XI, 1987 Constitution.

[4] Supra note 2.

[5] Record of the Constitutional Commission: Proceedings and Debates, Vol. II, p. 272.

[6] Alexander Hamilton, The Federalist No. 65.

[7] Fr. Joaquin Bernas, S.J., The Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines - A Commentary, (1986 ed.), p. 989.

[8] This power was given to the most political of the branches of government because of sound and practical considerations on the nature of impeachment. Originally, the Framers of the American Federal Constitution considered placing the impeachment power with the Federal Judiciary. However, this plan was discarded because the Constitutional Framers felt that the Legislature was the most "fit depositary of this important trust" and it was doubted if the members of the Supreme Court "would possess the degree of credit and authority" to carry out its judgment if it conflicted with Congress authority.

[9] Supra note 1 at 4.

[10] Raoul Berger, Impeachment: The Constitutional Problems, Harvard University Press, 1973, citing Joseph Borkin, The Corrupt Judge, New York, (1962).

[11] The House of Commons did not exercise the right to impeach sparingly. For instance, during the reign of James I (1603-1625) and Charles I (1628-1649), over 100 impeachments were voted by it.

[12] Supra note 1 at 4, citing Plucknett, Presidential Address reproduced in 3 Transactions, Royal Historical Society, 5th Series, (1952), p. 145.

[13] Supra note 1 at 4, citing John Hatsell's Precedents of Proceedings in the House of Commons, ( 1956), p. 63.

[14] Saikrishna Prakash and Steven D. Smith, How to Remove a Federal Judge, (2006), 116 Yale L.J. 72, 110 & 136.

[15] Irving Kaufman, Chilling Judicial Independence, in Benjamin N. Cardozo Memorial Lecture, p. 1200.

[16] Arthur Bestor, Impeachment, (1973), 49 Wash. L. Rev. 255, 258.

[17] Id., citing Viscount James Bryce, The American Commonwealth, (1908), p. 233.

[18] Supra note 14 at 135.

[19] J. Hampden Dougherty, Inherent Limitations upon Impeachment, (1913-14), 23 Yale L.J. 60, 70.

[20] Supra note 6 at 423-424.

[21] Justice Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Constitution, (1905, 5th ed.), §764, p. 559.

[22] Jerome S. Sloan; Ira E. Garr, Treason, Bribery, or Other High Crimes and Misdemeanors - A Study of Impeachment, (1974), 47 Temp. L.Q. 413, 414 (citing Lawrence, The Law of Impeachment, (1867), 6 Am L. Register (N.S.) 641).

[23] Id. at 455.

[24] Peter M. Shane, Who May Discipline or Remove Federal Judges? A Constitutional Analysis, 209 U. Pa. L. Rev., 142,215.

[25] Id., citing See Joseph H. Smith, An Independent Judiciary: The Colonial Background, (1976), 124 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1104, 1113 (describing attempt by the Pennsylvania Assembly in the 1700s to insist that colonial judges be displaced for misbehavior at the request of the Assembly); id. at 1153-55 (describing address under, inter alia, the Bill of Rights of the Massachusetts Constitution of 1780, the Delaware and Maryland Constitutions of 1776, and the South Carolina Constitution of 1778); An address is a concurrent resolution of both houses of the legislature requesting the governor to remove a judge from office.

[26] The Declaration of Independence, (U.S. 1776), para. 10 ("He has made Judges dependent on his Will alone, for the tenure of their offices, and the amount and payment of their salaries.").

[27] Lisa L. Lewis, Judicial Discipline, Removal and Retirement, (1976), 1976 Wis. L. Rev. 563, 564.

[28] Id. at 566.

[29] Id.

[30] Id. at 567.

[31] "Good behavior" is commonly associated with the Act of Settlement (1700) which granted judges tenure quamdiu se bene gesserint, that is, for so long as they conduct themselves well, and also provide for termination by the Crown upon the Address of both Houses of Parliament. The origin of "good behavior" long antedates the Act. Judge St. George Tucker, a pioneer commentator on the Constitution, noted in 1803 that "these words in all commissions and grants, public and private, imported an office or estate, for the life of the grantee, determinable only by his death, or breach of good behavior". In the Pennsylvania Ratification Convention, Chief Justice McKean explained that "the judges may continue for life, if they shall so long behave themselves well."

[32] Supra note 14 at 116 & 123.

[33] Id. at 127.

[34] Burke Shartel, Federal Judges-Appointmen Supervision, and Removal-Some Possibilities Under the Constitution, (1930), 28 Mich. L. Rev. 870, 891-98 (citing Baron John Comyns, A Digest of the Laws of England, 1766).

[35] Id. (arguing for judicial self-discipline and removal power).

[36] Id. This procedure found employment with lesser officials - rising no higher than a Recorder, a lesser judge - and that there is no English case wherein a judge comparable to a federal judge was removed in a judicial proceeding.

[37] Raoul Berger, Chilling Judicial Independence: A Scarecrow, (1979), 64 Cornell L. Rev. 822, 831.

[38] Id.

[39] Id., citing Mc Ilwain, The Tenure of English Judges, (1913), Am. Pol. Sci. Rev. pp. 217-221.

[40] Id. at 832.

[41] Id.



Quo Warranto

The legal remedy of quo warranto is a high prerogative writ[1] that traces its roots in English history and whose origin has long been "obscured by antiquity."[2] Historical records show that the writ was issued as far back as 1198 A.D. during the reign of King Richard I of England, when it was issued against an incumbent of a church, ordering him to show his right to hold the church.[3]

The ancient writ of quo warranto was a common law remedy and was considered to be "in the nature of a writ of right for the King, against him who claimed or usurped any office, franchise or liberty, to inquire by what authority he supported his claim in order to determine the right."[4] It was "issued out of chancery and was returnable before the King's Bench at Westminister."[5] Meanwhile, its proceedings were purely civil in nature and a judgment against the respondent simply involved "seizure of the franchise by the Crown or a judgment of ouster against the party who had usurped the franchise."[6] A proceeding for a writ of quo warranto was always initiated by the Crown Attorney or on his relation.[7] A private individual was never allowed to file the suit because a usurpation of a right or franchise of the Crown concerned the Crown alone, and "whether the party so usurping should be ousted or permitted to continue and enjoy the franchise was a matter that rested solely with the King."[8]

Afterward, the ancient writ was gradually abandoned and superseded by the remedy of information in the nature of quo warranto, with the latter being employed exclusively as a prerogative remedy to punish a usurper of the franchises or liberties granted by the Crown.[9] Similar to the ancient writ of quo warranto, its scope was limited to encroachments upon the royal prerogative.[10]

Subsequently in 1710, the Statute of 9 Anne, c. 20 was passed, which introduced several changes to the procedure to make the practice of quo warranto speedier and more effective.[11]

One glaring difference is that the information in the nature of quo warranto treated usurpation as a crime.[12] Thus, its nature transformed into a criminal proceeding to ascertain "which of two claimants was entitled to an office and warranted not only a judgment of ouster, but a fine or even imprisonment against the respondent if he was found guilty of usurpation."[13] It also required "the proper officer, by leave of the court, to exhibit an information in the nature of a quo warranto at the relation of any person desiring to prosecute the same" against the designated municipal officers."[14]

Another pertinent difference is that it finally provided private individuals a legal remedy to prosecute or question the usurpation of an office or franchise, albeit with the consent of the state. Thus, the informations in the nature of a quo warranto resulted in two (2) kinds: 1) an information filed by the attorney-general or solicitor general on behalf of the Crown; and 2) an information filed with permission by the master of the crown office on the relation of some private individual.[15]

During British occupation, the United States of America (US) adopted the information in the nature of quo warranto, notwithstanding several differences.[16] In fact, it treated usurpation as a quasi-criminal act, which was adopted in some American states and formed the basis of statutes in others.[17]

In 1884, with the enactment of the Supreme Court of Judicature Act of 1884, or Statute 47 and 48 Viet. Chap. 61, the information in the nature of quo warranto shed its nature as a criminal proceeding and became recognized as a civil proceeding.[18]

In 1902, the US Congress followed suit and adopted a District Code for the District of Columbia, which contained a chapter on quo warranto which bore similarities with the English model.[19] Under the District Code, the writ was treated as a civil remedy instead of a criminal one and encompassed all persons in the District who exercised any office, civil, or military.[20] It was made available to test the right to exercise a public franchise or to hold an office in a private corporation. The District Code treats usurpation of officers as a public wrong which can be corrected only by proceeding in the name of the government itself. It, however, recognized that there might be instances in which it would be proper to allow such proceedings to be instituted by a third person with the consent of the Attorney General.[21]

Notably, the quo warranto is not the only concept that can be traced back to English laws, but its procedure as well.

Sometime in February 1822, the US Supreme Court established Rules of Equity Procedure for the federal courts, pursuant to its authority under the 1792 Process Act.[22] Equity is nothing new. It is a centuries-old system of English jurisprudence in which "judges based decisions on general principles of fairness in situations where rigid application of common-law rules would have brought about injustice." The Rules also specified that "all situations not otherwise provided for were to be governed by the practices of the High Court of Chancery in England." In 1842 and 1912, the US Supreme Court issued new sets of equity rules.[23] From then on, various persons and institutions have lobbied for the creation of a federal code, namely, David Dudley Field and the American Bar Association under the leadership of Thomas Shelton.[24] Sometime in 1922, Chief Justice William Howard Taft addressed the American Bar Association, urging the union of law and equity in the proposed civil procedure.[25]

In 1938, after years of lobbying and drafting, the US Federal Rules of Civil Procedure was finally promulgated pursuant to the Act of June 19, 1934.[26] It merged law and equity into one type ofsuit known as a "civil action,"[27] as well as formulated an important federal court system which embraced the district courts of the US held in several States and in the District of Columbia.[28] Likewise, it was designed to unify the federal practice in the US and modernize procedure and was primarily based on the Equity Rules of 1912.[29]

Under the Rules, the civil rules apply to quo warranto proceedings, but only to appeals and then only to the extent that the practice in such proceedings is not prescribed by Federal Statute.[30] The provisions in the law have not changed much as the present US Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provide:
TITLE XI. GENERAL PROVISIONS

Rule 81. Applicability of the Rules in General; Removed Actions

(A)
APPLICABILITY TO PARTICULAR PROCEEDINGS


(B)
Prize Proceedings. These rules do not apply to prize proceedings in admiralty governed by 10 U.S.C. §§ 7651-7681.

(2) Bankruptcy. These rules apply to bankruptcy proceedings to the extent provided by the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure.

(3) Citizenship. These rules apply to proceedings for admission to citizenship to the extent that the practice in those proceedings is not specified in federal statutes and has previously conformed to the practice in civil actions. The provisions of 8 U.S.C. § 1451 for service by publication and for answer apply in proceedings to cancel citizenship certificates.

(4) Special Writs. These rules apply to proceedings for habeas corpus and for quo warranto to the extent that the practice in those proceedings:

(A)
is not specified in a federal statute, the Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases, or the Rules Governing Section 2255 Cases; and


(B)
has previously conformed to the practice m civil actions.

x x x x.[31]
Presently, it is the state constitutions and statutes that contain particular provisions on jurisdiction over quo warranto proceedings.[32] Indeed, the use of this remedy, and the practice and procedure in seeking and applying it, have been regulated by statute in many of the States and in some superseded altogether. However, where the quo warranto is still in use, its main features are still the same.[33]

In the US, the quo warranto has been effectively used as a means to oust officials who have been found to usurp or not possess rightful title to their office, even those belonging in the judiciary. In Commonwealth v. Fowler,[34] it was claimed that an information in the nature of quo warranto did not lie against an officer appointed and commissioned by the Executive. After all, it is the Executive that has the exclusive right to appoint officers as well as determine if a vacancy in the office exists and to fill such vacancy. The Supreme Court of Massachusetts, however, did not accept such rationale. It held that the validity of an appointment was judicially obtainable[35] as the remedy of quo warranto lies and is available to test the right to a judicial office.[36]

The remedy of quo warranto was adopted in the Philippines while the country was under American occupation[37] with its procedure delineated in the old Code of Civil Procedure. It was primarily used in cases "where a person has no title to the office which he pretends to hold and has no right to exercise the functions which he assumes to exercise, or where a corporation acts without being legally incorporated or has offended against some provision of law in such manner as to forfeit its privileges and franchise or has surrendered its corporate rights, privileges, or franchise."[38] Section 197 of the Code of Civil Procedure states the grounds for filing a petition for quo warranto:
Sec. 197. Usurpation of an Office or Franchise - A civil action may be brought in the name of the Government of the Philippine Islands:
  1. Against a person who usurps, intrudes into, or unlawfully holds or exercises a public civil office or a franchise within the Philippine Islands, or an office in a corporation created by the authority of the Government of the Philippine Islands;

  2. Against a public civil officer who does or suffers an act which, by the provisions of law, works a forfeiture of his office;

  3. Against an association of persons who act as a corporation within the Philippine Islands, without being legally incorporated or without lawful authority so to act.
However, it was not until the 1973 Philippine Constitution that quo warranto was clearly stated in the Constitution, to wit:
Sec. 5. The Supreme Court shall have the following powers:

(1)
Exercise original jurisdiction over cases affecting ambassadors, other public ministers, and consuls, and over petitions for certiorari, prohibition, mandamus, quo warranto, and habeas corpus.



(2)
Review and revise, reverse, modify, or affirm on appeal or certiorari, as the law or the Rules of Court may provide, final judgments and decrees of inferior courts in-




(a) All cases in which the constitutionality or validity of any treaty, executive agreement, law, ordinance, or executive order or regulation is in question.




(b) All cases involving the legality of any tax, impost, assessment, or toll, or any penalty imposed in relation thereto.




(c) All cases in which the jurisdiction of any inferior court is in issue.




(d) All criminal cases in which the penalty imposed is death or life imprisonment.




(e) All cases in which only an error or question of law is involved.
   
x x x x
At present, the proceeding for quo warranto is found in Rule 66 of the 1997 Revised Rules for Civil Procedure.

In allegations made in a quo warranto petition, the State or relator, as plaintiffs, must allege several facts, foremost of which is the act of usurpation and possession of defendant, and show that such usurpation and possession are still being illegally usurped by the latter. Even if unnecessary facts are pleaded, right of redress will not be prejudiced as long as the information presents facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.[39] It must be emphasized that particularity of facts is only considered when the proceeding is filed against a corporation to forfeit its franchise for nonuser or misuser.[40]

On the other hand, defendant, in his Answer, must already plead facts showing his valid title to the office as the State is not bound to show anything. Likewise, it is not sufficient to merely claim that the relator is not entitled to the office, the defendant is still called upon to show by what authority he exercises the functions of the office he holds. Otherwise, the State is entitled to a judgment of ouster.[41] Indeed, the defendant cannot escape the legal consequences for failure to justify his title by reason of the fact that the right or title of the relator may not be sufficient.[42]

Further, the sufficiency of the information is measured by the rules applicable to civil cases. Sufficiency of matters will not be examined when no timely objection is made, the matters are not preserved for consideration, and are considered waived when respondent answers.[43]

Previously, the practice was to reverse the ordinary rule of pleading and charge nothing specifically on behalf of the State. It was respondent's task to prove his right to the franchise or office, otherwise judgment went against him. Today, the practice is to set forth in the information in some detail the facts relied upon to show the intrusion, misuser or nonuser complained of.[44]

Quo warranto proceedings are regarded as civil actions, and as such, the general rules of civil actions are readily applicable. Nonetheless, jurisprudence evinces the fact that some civil law principles are not applied in quo warranto proceedings, such as burden of proof and prescription, when the petition is filed by the Attorney General, or in the case of the Philippines, the Solicitor General.

Ordinarily, in civil cases, it is the plaintiff who alleges his right who has the burden of proving his entitlement to such right. In quo warranto proceedings, however, the rule is quite different. When the action is brought by the attorney general ex officio to test a person's right to a public office, the burden of proof, in the first instance, falls on respondent whose right to the office is challenged.[45] Moreover, respondent must also show that he continuously possesses the qualifications necessary to enjoy his title to the office.[46] The State is not required to establish respondent's qualifications as it is the latter's obligation to make out an indisputable case.[47] Indeed, the entire burden is upon respondent.[48]

The exception to the rule that it is respondent who bears the burden of proof is when the quo warranto proceeding was brought on relation of a private individual as claimant, or for a private purpose when authorized by a statute. In such cases, the burden of proof lies on the person asserting his title to the office.[49]

When, however. respondent has made out a prima facie right to the office, as by showing that he was declared duly elected by the proper officers or has received a certificate of election or holds the commission of appointment by the executive to the office in question, the burden of proof shifts.[50]

The principle on burden of proof has consistently been applied in US jurisprudence. A study of US Jurisprudence shows that in quo warranto cases filed by the State, the burden of proof is always on defendant to show his right to the title of the office.

In People ex rel. Finnegan v. Mayworm,[51] the Supreme Court of Michigan emphasized that the burden of proof falls on defendant to establish his or her right to the office. The facts show that on September 30, 1856, an election was conducted for the position of Houghton County Sheriff. From all the votes cast, John Burns received 369 votes, while petitioner Michael Finnegan received the remaining votes: as Michael Finegan- 271 votes, Michael Finnegan- 175 votes, and Michael Finnigan - 1 vote. The board of canvassers declared Bums duly elected. Petitioner was not given any formal official notice of the result of the election and the decision of the board. Nonetheless, he found out about the results after it was announced. The newly elected Sheriff Burns, meanwhile, never took or filed the oath of office nor did he ever give and deposit the bond as required by law. On December 25, 1856, Bums, after only serving as Sheriff for a short while, resigned. There being no undersheriff, or other person authorized to perform the duties of the office, the county clerk and prosecuting attorney, on said day, appointed defendant Francis Mayworm as acting Sheriff to fill the vacancy left behind by Bums. Mayworm took an oath and deposited the bond required under the law.[52]

Thereafter, Finnegan filed a quo warranto petition against Mayworm, asserting that the former is entitled to the office. The Court ruled that by applying the legal doctrine of idem sonans, Finnegan was entitled to the office as he was duly elected by the majority of the people.[53] Hence, judgment of ouster must be rendered against Mayworm. Indeed, although Mayworm's appointment appears to have been regular, it is not enough that an officer appointed for a temporary purpose should show a legal appointment. The usurpation charged is a continuing usurpation, one alleged to exist months after the commencement of a new statutory term. The rule is well settled, that "where the state calls upon an individual to show his title to an office, he must show the continued existence of every qualification necessary to the enjoyment of the office. The state is bound to make no showing, and the defendant must make out an undoubted case.[54] It is not sufficient to state the qualifications necessary to the appointment, and rely on the presumption of their continuance. The law makes no such presumption in his favor."[55]

Meanwhile, in the more recent case of Krajicek v. Gale,[56] petitioner Tim Kracijek was elected to represent subdistrict No. 8 on the board of directors of the Papio Missouri River Natural Resources District (NRD) for a term of four years. At the time of the election, Kracijek lived at 104 Madison St., Omaha, Nebraska, which was located within subdistrict No. 8.[57]

Thereafter, the Douglas County Attorney, on behalf of the State, filed a quo warranto petition seeking an order that Krajicek be removed from office as he changed his residence to 7819 South 45th Ave., which is outside the boundaries of subdistrict No. 8. As a result of the change in address, Krajicek had vacated his office pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat. §32-560 (5) (Reissue 1998) of the Election Act, which required incumbent officers to be a resident of the district where their duties are to be exercised and for which he or she may have been elected.[58]

Krajicek, meanwhile, alleged that he resided at 4505 Jefferson St, which was located within subdistrict No. 8, and that he also owned a house located at 7819 South 45th Ave. The house in Jefferson St., however, was currently being occupied by his aunt and uncle. Likewise, he presented evidence showing that he was registered to vote, received mail, stored personal items, filed tax returns, and registered his vehicle at 4505 Jefferson St. The State, on the other hand, presented evidence that Krajicek and his family were currently living in 7819 South 45th Ave. Likewise, his wife's car registration as well as the couple's tax return indicated their address as 7819 South 45th Ave. The house in 4505 Jefferson St., meanwhile, was built and paid for Kracijek's aunt and uncle and the latter paid for the insurance, utilities, and other related expenses for the upkeep of the house.[59]

The district court ruled in favor of the quo warranto petition, finding that Krajicek no longer properly held the office of the director of the NRD. On appeal, the appellate court affirmed the lower court's decision, ruling that Krajicek failed to present sufficient evidence that he was a resident of subdistrict No. 8. Indeed, the "burden of proof in the first instance is on the defendant whose right to the office is challenged."[60] "Where the proceeding is brought to try title to a public office, the burden rests on the defendant respondent, as against the state at least, to show a right to the office from which he or she is ought to be ousted."[61]

With regard to the prescription of a quo warranto petition, Section 11, Rule 66 of the Revised Rules of Court expressly states that an action against a public officer or employee for his ouster from office unless the same be commenced within one year after the cause of such ouster, or the right of the petitioner to hold such office or position, arose; nor to authorize an action for damages in accordance with the provisions of the next preceding section unless the same be commenced within one year after the entry of the judgment establishing the petitioner's right to the office in question.

This provision, however, only applies to a petition for quo warranto that is initiated by a private person alleging his title to the office as against that of respondent's.

Similar to the principle on burden of proof, prescription in quo warranto proceedings are to be construed differently. To shed light on its applicability, one must refer to its origins in US jurisprudence. In a long line of cases, it is well-settled that the "statute of limitations generally does not run against the state or commonwealth in a quo warranto proceeding concerning a public right."[62] It has also been held that "a quo warranto proceeding by the state was not barred by the statute of limitations because it was provided that the limitation should not apply to actions brought in the name of the state."[63]

Since a quo warranto proceeding is not simply a civil remedy for the protection of private rights, but rather a matter of public concern, the statute of limitations as to civil actions does not apply to it.[64] Indeed, a quo warranto proceeding that intends to remove a public official is considered as a governmental function; hence, no statute of limitations is applicable.[65]

In People ex rel. Moloney v. Pullman's Palace-Car Co.,[66] the attorney general filed an information in the nature of a quo warranto in the circuit court of Cook county, in the name and on behalf of the people of the State of Illinois, against Pullman's Palace-Car Company.[67]

The information sets out the charter of the defendant, and then alleges 21 acts which are alleged to be usurpations by the defendant of powers not conferred by its charter, and concludes with a prayer for the forfeiture of the charter of the corporation. Some of the allegations contained in the information of the usurpations of power on the part of the defendant, among others, include ownership and control of a large blocks of real property as well as businesses located therein, defendant's receipt of a large income from the rental of such properties with only a small portion of it occupied by the company's employees, and defendant's alleged manipulation and control of the affairs of the Town of Pullman.[68]

The district court ruled that the corporation, at and before the time of the filing of the information, was exercising powers and performing acts not authorized either by the express grant of its charter or any implication of law. Further, the corporation was exercising powers and functions which the general law of the state contemplates shall be possessed and exercised only by municipal authorities of cities or towns as well as public school authorities. Thus, its acts and doings are opposed to good public policy.[69]

The court likewise stated that "demand of the sovereign that usurpations so clearly antagonistic to good public policy shall be restrained can be defeated by any imputation of laches, or upon the ground that acquiescence is to be inferred from the failure to invoke the aid of courts at an early day."[70] It is the general rule that "laches, acquiescence, or unreasonable delay in the performance of duty on the part of the officers of the state, is not imputable to the state when acting in its character as a sovereign."[71] It is also acknowledged that "the state, acting in its character as a sovereign, is not bound by any statute of limitations or technical estoppel."[72]

In the more recent case of State of Kansas ex. rel. Stovall v. Meneley,[73] one of the issues raised was the applicability of the statute of limitations on quo warranto petitions brought by the Attorney General on behalf of the State. The facts of the case are as follows:

Sometime in November 1996, David R. Meneley was elected a second time as Sheriff of Shawnee County, Kansas. In 1993, he created a special services unit, which, in addition to investigating burglaries, provided manpower for surveillance support for the narcotics unit. Deputy Timothy Oblander was a member of the said unit. Sometime in late 1993 or early 1994, Oblander started consuming small amounts of cocaine and methamphetamine, taking the drugs from the evidence packets used to train his dog. He carried the drugs with him daily. On two (2) occasions, it was discovered that there was a weight discrepancy in the drugs. These discrepancies were supposed to be noted on reports signed by the property room officer and Oblander. Nothing, however, was ever done to resolve the discrepancies. Sometime in late 1994 or early 1995, Oblander began making drug buys on the street. He even occasionally consumed the drugs he purchased. In late July 1994, Officer J.D. Sparkman retrieved a bag of evidence from the drug evidence locker located at the sheriff's office in the basement of the Shawnee County Courthouse. The evidence was from the Caldwell case which involved state and federal drug charges. After weighing the evidence, Sparkman discovered that some of the cocaine evidence was missing. As a result, Caldwell was acquitted.[74]

On November 23, 1999, Oblander confessed to taking the Caldwell drugs to the district attorney. Meneley directed a local health care provider to examine Oblander. Later on, Oblander entered Valley Hope Treatment Center in Atchison, Kansas. The Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) subsequently conducted an investigation. They found out that Meneley knew that Oblander was using drugs and had stolen drugs.[75]

On May 24, 1999, the Attorney General filed a petition for quo warranto for the ouster of Meneley on behalf of the State on the ground of willful misconduct in office. The trial judges unanimously found, by clear and convincing evidence, that Meneley committed willful misconduct, as contemplated in K.S.A. 60-1205(1). He knowingly and willfully concealed evidence of Oblander's theft of drug evidence, he falsely testified under oath at an Attorney General's inquisition by denying his knowledge of Oblander's illegal drug use and treatment for drug addiction, and he falsely testified under oath in the Shawnee County District Court by denying that he had any knowledge regarding Oblander's illegal drug use and treatment for drug addiction.[76]

Meneley argued that a quo warranto action seeking ouster from office is considered as a "forfeiture." Therefore, a 1-year statute of limitation applies under K.S.A. 60-514. Since several of the alleged acts of misconduct occurred outside the 1-year limitation, the case should have been dismissed. The court, however, ruled otherwise, stating that "K.S.A. 60-521, by negative implication, retains governmental immunity from the statute of limitations for causes of action arising out of a governmental function."[77]

Notably, "governmental functions are those performed for the general public with respect to the common welfare for which no compensation or particular benefit is received. Proprietary functions, on the other hand, are exercised when an enterprise is commercial in character or is usually carried on by private individuals or is for the profit, benefit, or advantage of the governmental unit conducting the activity."[78] Since quo warranto proceedings seeking ouster of a public official are considered as a governmental function,[79] no statute of limitations is thus applicable.[80]

It must be pointed out that it is not only the civil law principle on statute of limitations that does not apply in quo warranto proceedings initiated by the State. Neither will laches, estoppel, or waiver by inaction apply as "inaction by the State may not be subject to waiver by inaction on the theory that the public interest is paramount to the prejudices arising from the passage of time."[81] In applying the doctrine of laches to quo warranto proceedings, "no fixed time will be taken as controlling, but the facts in each particular case must govern the court's decision."[82] Indeed, the statute of limitations or technical estoppel does not bind the State, acting in its sovereign capacity because "laches, acquiescence or unreasonable delay in the performance of duty on the part of the officers of the State is not imputable to the State."[83] In view of the fact that the statute of limitation does not run against the State and laches, estoppel, or acquiescence does not apply, the issue on reckoning period or date of discovery is thus rendered moot.


[1] Floyd R. Mechem. Treatise on the Law of Public Offices and Officers, (1890), p. 304.

[2] Forrest G. Ferris & Forrest Ferris, Jr., The Law on Extraordinary Legal Remedies, (1926), p. 126. Citations omitted.

[3] Arthur J. Eddy, Law of Combinations Embracing Monopolies, Trusts, and Combinations of Labor and Capital; Conspiracy, and Contracts in Restraint of Trade, (1901), p. 1221.

[4] Supra note 1 at 304, citing High Ex. Leg. Rem. § 592.

[5] Supra note 2 at 126. Citations omitted.

[6] Supra note 3 at 1223.

[7] Supra note 2 at 127. Citations omitted.

[8] Id. at 128. Citations omitted.

[9] Id.

[10] Id.

[11] Id. at 127. Citations omitted; see also Newman v. United States ex. Rel. Frizzell, 238 U.S. 537, 544 (1915).

[12] Newman v. United States ex. Rel. Frizzell, id. at 543.

[13] Id. at 544.

[14] Id.

[15] Supra note 3 at 1233.

[16] Supra note 2 at 130, citations omitted; see supra note 3 at 1233.

[17] Newman v. United States ex. Rel. Frizzell, supra note 11 at 544.

[18] Supra note 2 at 131. Citations omitted.

[19] Newman v. United States ex. Rel. Frizzell, supra note 11 at 544.

[20] Newman v. United States ex. Rel. Frizzell, supra note 11 at 544.

[21] Newman v. United States ex. Rel. Frizzell, supra note 11 at 546.

[22] Federal Judicial Center, Equity Rules, available at https://www.fjc.gov/history/timeline/equity­rules (last accessed June 15, 2018).

[23] Id.

[24] James WM. Moore & Joseph Friedman, A Treatise on the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, (1938), pp. 7-8.

[25] Id. at 9.

[26] Lawrence Koenigsberger, An Introduction to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, (1938), p. 1, citing Rule 81 (a)(2); supra note 24 at 6.

[27] Supra note 22.

[28] Supra note 24 at 1.

[29] Id. at 2-3.

[30] Supra note 26 at 6, citing Rule 81 (a)(2)

[31] Emphasis and underscoring supplied.

[32] See Logan Scott Stafford, Judicial Coup d' Etat: Mandamus, Quo warranto and the Origin Jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of Arkansas, (1998), 20 UALR L. J. 891, 892; see also Newman v. United States ex. Rel. Frizzell, supra note 11.

[33] Supra note 1 at 304-305.

[34] 10 Mass. 290 (1813).

[35] Id. at 301-302.

[36] J.F.D., The Missouri Supreme Judgeship: Conflict between Executive and Judiciary. Powers of Constitutional Convention. Quo warranto, The American Law Register (1852-1891), Vol. 13, No. 12, New Series Volume 4 (October,1865), p. 719, citing State v. McBride, 4 Mo. Rep. 303, 1836.

[37] Alberto v. Nicolas, 279 U.S. 139 (1929).

[38] Vicente J. Francisco, The Revised Rules of Court of the Philippines, Vol. V, (1970), p. 319.

[39] Supra note 2 at 150. Citations omitted.

[40] Supra note 3 at 1277.

[41] John F. Dillon, Commentaries on the Law of Municipal Corporations, (1911), p. 2734.

[42] Library of Law and Practice, (1919), p. 41.

[43] Supra note 2 at 150-151. Citations omitted.

[44] Supra note 3 at 1277.

[45] Krajicek v. Gale, 267 Neb. 623, 677 N.W.2d 488, 495 (2004); see supra note 2 at 156, citations omitted; see also Halbert E. Paine, Treatise on the Law of Elections to Public Offices, Exhibiting the Rules and Principles Applicable to Contests before Judicial Tribunals and Parliamentary Bodies, (1888), p. 745.

[46] People ex rel. Finnegan v. Mayworm, 5 Mich. 146, 148 (1858).

[47] Supra note 2 at 126. Citations omitted.

[48] Supra note 38 at 357; supra note 42 at 42.

[49] Supra note 2 at 157. Citations omitted.

[50] Supra note 1 at 322.

[51] 5 Mich. 146 (1858).

[52] Id. at 147.

[53] Idem sonans is a Latin term meaning sounding the same or similar; having the same sound. It is a legal doctrine in which a person's identity is presumed known despite the misspelling of his or her name.

[54] People ex rel. Finnegan, 5 Mich. at 148 (1858).

[55] Id., citing State v. Beecher, 15 Ohio, 723; People v. Phillips, 1 Denio, 388; State v. Harris, 3 Pike, 570.

[56] 677 N.W.2d 490 (2004).

[57] Id.

[58] Id.

[59] Id. at 491.

[60] Id. at 495, citing Stasch v. Weber, 188 Neb. 710, 711, 199 N.W.2d 391, 393 (1972).

[61] Id. at 495, citing 65 Am. Jur.2d Quo warranto § 119 at 165 (2001).

[62] Catlett v. People (1894) 151 Ill 16, 37 NE 855; Commonwealth ex rel. Atty. Gen. v. Bala & Byrn Mawr Turnpike Co. (1893) 153 Pa 47, 25 A 1105.

[63] State ex rel. Security Sav. & Trust Co. v. School District No. 9 of Tillamook County (1934) 148 Or 273, 36 P2d 179.

[64] McPhail v. People (1895) 160 Ill 77, 43 NE 382, 52 Am St Rep 306.

[65] State ex rel. Stovall v. Meneley, 271 Kan. 355,22 P.3d 124 (2001).

[66] 64 L.R.A. 366, 175 Ill. 125, 51. N.E. 664 (1898).

[67] Id. at 665.

[68] Id. at 665-667

[69] Id. at 677.

[70] Id. at 677.

[71] Id. at 676.

[72] People ex rel. Moloney v. Pullman's Palace-Car Co, 64 L.R.A. 366, 175 Ill. 125, 51. N.E. at 676.

[73] State ex rel. Stovall v. Meneley, 271 Kan. 355, 22 P.3d 124 (2001).

[74] Id. at 359-360.

[75] Id. at 361.

[76] Id. at 364.

[77] Id. at 384, citing KPERS v. Reimer & Koger Assocs., Inc., 262 Kan. 635, 659, 941 P.2d 1321 ( 1997); State ex rel. Schneider v. McAfee, 2 Kan. App.2d 274, 275, 578 P.2d 281, rev. denied 225 Kan. 845 (1978).

[78] State ex rel. Stovall, 271 Kan. 355, 22 P.3d 124 at 384, citing State ex rel. Schneider v. McAfee, 2 Kan. App.2d at 276; see also international Ass'n of Firefighters v. City of Lawrence, 14 Kan. App.2d 788, Syl. 3,798 P.2d 960 rev. denied, 248 Kan. 996 (1991).

[79] Id. at 384, citing State ex rel., v. Showalter, 189 Kan. 562, 569, 370 P.2d 408 (1962).

[80] Id. at 385.

[81] Carleton v. Civil Service Com'n of City of Bridgeport, 10 Conn. App. 209, 522 A.2d 825 ( I987).

[82] State ex rel. Harmis v. Alexander (1906) 129 Iowa 538, 105 NW 1021; State ex rel. School Township v. Kinkade (1922) 192 Iowa 1362, 186 NW 662; State ex rel. Crain v. Baker (1937, Mo App) 104 SW2d 726; State ex rel. Madderson v. Nohle (1907) 16 ND 168, 112 NW 141, 125 Am St Rep 628.

[83] Supra note 3 at 1267.



Source: Supreme Court E-Library
This page was dynamically generated
by the E-Library Content Management System (E-LibCMS)