De Castro v. JBC GR 191002
De Castro
v. JBC GR 191002
ISSUE: Whether or not the incumbent President can
appoint the next Chief Justice
FACTS: These cases trace their genesis to the
controversy that has arisen from the forthcoming compulsory retirement of Chief
Justice Puno on May 17, 2010, or seven days after the presidential election.
Under Section 4(1), in relation to Section 9, Article VIII, that “vacancy shall
be filled within ninety days from the occurrence thereof” from a “list of at
least three nominees prepared by the Judicial and Bar Council for every
vacancy.” Also considering that Section 15, Article VII (Executive Department) of
the Constitution prohibits the President or Acting President from making
appointments within two months immediately before the next presidential
elections and up to the end of his term, except temporary appointments to
executive positions when continued vacancies therein will prejudice public
service or endanger public safety. The JBC, in its en banc meeting of January
18, 2010, unanimously agreed to start the process of filling up the position of
Chief Justice. Conformably with its existing practice, the JBC “automatically
considered” for the position of Chief Justice the five most senior of the
Associate Justices of the Court, namely: Associate Justice Antonio T. Carpio;
Associate Justice Renato C. Corona; Associate Justice Conchita Carpio Morales;
Associate Justice Presbitero J. Velasco, Jr.; and Associate Justice Antonio
Eduardo B. Nachura. However, the last two declined their nomination through
letters dated January 18, 2010 and January 25, 2010, respectively. The OSG
contends that the incumbent President may appoint the next Chief Justice,
because the prohibition under Section 15, Article VII of the Constitution does
not apply to appointments in the Supreme Court.
DECISION: Denied
RATIO
DECIDENDI: Prohibition under section 15,
Article VII does not apply to appointments to fill a vacancy in the Supreme
Court or to other appointments to the judiciary. The records of the
deliberations of the Constitutional Commission reveal that the framers devoted
time to meticulously drafting, styling, and arranging the Constitution. Such
meticulousness indicates that the organization and arrangement of the
provisions of the Constitution were not arbitrarily or whimsically done by the
framers, but purposely made to reflect their intention and manifest their vision
of what the Constitution should contain. As can be seen, Article VII is devoted
to the Executive Department, and, among others, it lists the powers vested by
the Constitution in the President. The presidential power of appointment is
dealt with in Sections 14, 15 and 16 of the Article. Had the framers intended
to extend the prohibition contained in Section 15, Article VII to the
appointment of Members of the Supreme Court, they could have explicitly done
so. They could not have ignored the meticulous ordering of the provisions. They
would have easily and surely written the prohibition made explicit in Section
15, Article VII as being equally applicable to the appointment of Members of
the Supreme Court in Article VIII itself, most likely in Section 4 (1), Article
VIII.
DISSENTING OPINION
CARPIO
MORALES, J.:
It is thus
imperative to settle the following issues and concerns:
Whether
the incumbent President is constitutionally proscribed from appointing the
successor of Chief Justice Reynato S. Puno upon his retirement on May 17, 2010
until the ban ends at 12:00 noon of June 30, 2010
1. In interpreting the subject constitutional
provisions, the Decision disregarded established canons of statutory
construction. Without explaining the inapplicability of each of the relevant
rules, the Decision immediately placed premium on the arrangement and ordering
of provisions, one of the weakest tools of construction, to arrive at its
conclusion.
2. In reversing Valenzuela, the Decision
held that the Valenzuela dictum did not firmly rest on ConCom
deliberations, yet it did not offer to cite a material ConCom deliberation.
It instead opted to rely on the memory of Justice Florenz Regalado which
incidentally mentioned only the "Court of Appeals." The Decision’s
conclusion must rest on the strength of its own favorable Concom deliberation,
none of which to date has been cited.
3. Instead of choosing which constitutional
provision carves out an exception from the other provision, the most legally
feasible interpretation (in the limited cases of temporary physical or
legal impossibility of compliance, as expounded in my Dissenting Opinion) is to
consider the appointments ban or other substantial obstacle as a temporary
impossibility which excuses or releases the constitutional obligation of the
Office of the President for the duration of the ban or obstacle.
In view of
the temporary nature of the circumstance causing the impossibility of
performance, the outgoing President is released from non-fulfillment of the
obligation to appoint, and the duty devolves upon the new President. The delay
in the fulfillment of the obligation becomes excusable, since the law cannot
exact compliance with what is impossible. The 90-day period within which to
appoint a member of the Court is thus suspended and the period could only start
or resume to run when the temporary obstacle disappears (i.e., after the period
of the appointments ban; when there is already a quorum in the JBC; or when
there is already at least three applicants).
Whether
the Judicial and Bar Council is obliged to submit to the President the
shortlist of nominees for the position of Chief Justice (or Justice of this
Court) on or before the occurrence of the vacancy.
1. The ruling in the Decision that obligates the
JBC to submit the shortlist to the President on or before the occurrence of the
vacancy in the Court runs counter to the Concom deliberations which
explain that the 90-day period is allotted for both the nomination by the JBC
and the appointment by the President. In the move to increase the period to 90
days, Commissioner Romulo stated that "[t]he sense of the Committee is
that 60 days is awfully short and that the [Judicial and Bar] Council, as
well as the President, may have difficulties with that."
2. To require the JBC to submit to the President
a shortlist of nominees on or before the occurrence of vacancy in the Court leads
to preposterous results. It bears reiterating that the requirement is absurd
when, inter alia, the vacancy is occasioned by the death of a member of
the Court, in which case the JBC could never anticipate the death of a Justice,
and could never submit a list to the President on or before the occurrence of
vacancy.
3. The express allowance in the Constitution of
a 90-day period of vacancy in the membership of the Court rebuts any
public policy argument on avoiding a vacuum of even a single day without a
duly appointed Chief Justice. Moreover, as pointed out in my Dissenting
Opinion, the practice of having an acting Chief Justice in the interregnum is
provided for by law, confirmed by tradition, and settled by jurisprudence to be
an internal matter.
The
Resolution of the majority, in denying the present Motions for Reconsideration,
failed to rebut the foregoing crucial matters.
I, therefore, maintain my dissent and vote to GRANT the Motions for Reconsideration of the Decision of March 17, 2010 insofar as it holds that the incumbent President is not constitutionally proscribed from appointing the successor of Chief Justice Reynato S. Puno upon his retirement on May 17, 2010 until the ban ends at 12:00 noon of June 30, 2010 and that the Judicial and Bar Council is obliged to submit to the President the shortlist of nominees for the position of Chief Justice on or before May 17, 2010.
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