TOPIC: Checks and Balances
GR 160261, 10 November 2003
Facts: On 28 November 2001,
the 12th Congress of the House of Representatives adopted and approved the
Rules of Procedure in Impeachment Proceedings, superseding the previous House
Impeachment Rules approved by the 11th Congress. On 22 July 2002, the House of
Representatives adopted a Resolution, which directed the Committee on Justice
"to conduct an investigation, in aid of legislation, on the manner of
disbursements and expenditures by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the
Judiciary Development Fund (JDF). On 2 June 2003, former President Joseph E.
Estrada filed an impeachment complaint (first impeachment complaint) against
Chief Justice Hilario G. Davide Jr. and seven Associate Justices of the Supreme
Court for "culpable violation of the Constitution, betrayal of the public
trust and other high crimes." The complaint was endorsed by House
Representatives, and was referred to the House Committee on Justice on 5 August
2003 in accordance with Section 3(2) of Article XI of the Constitution. The
House Committee on Justice ruled on 13 October 2003 that the first impeachment
complaint was "sufficient in form," but voted to dismiss the same on
22 October 2003 for being insufficient in substance. The following day or on 23
October 2003, the second impeachment complaint was filed with the Secretary
General of the House by House Representatives against Chief Justice Hilario G.
Davide, Jr., founded on the alleged results of the legislative inquiry
initiated by above-mentioned House Resolution. The second impeachment complaint
was accompanied by a "Resolution of Endorsement/Impeachment" signed
by at least 1/3 of all the Members of the House of Representatives. Various
petitions for certiorari, prohibition, and mandamus were filed with the Supreme
Court against the House of Representatives, et. al., most of which petitions
contend that the filing of the second impeachment complaint is unconstitutional
as it violates the provision of Section 5 of Article XI of the Constitution
that "[n]o impeachment proceedings shall be initiated against the same
official more than once within a period of one year."
Issue: Whether the power of
judicial review extends to those arising from impeachment proceedings.
Held: The Court's power of
judicial review is conferred on the judicial branch of the government in
Section 1, Article VIII of our present 1987 Constitution. The "moderating
power" to "determine the proper allocation of powers" of the
different branches of government and "to direct the course of government
along constitutional channels" is inherent in all courts as a necessary
consequence of the judicial power itself, which is "the power of the court
to settle actual controversies involving rights which are legally demandable
and enforceable." As indicated in Angara
v. Electoral Commission, judicial review is indeed an integral
component of the delicate system of checks and balances which, together with
the corollary principle of separation of powers, forms the bedrock of our
republican form of government and insures that its vast powers are utilized
only for the benefit of the people for which it serves. The separation
of powers is a fundamental principle in our system of government. It obtains
not through express provision but by actual division in our Constitution. Each
department of the government has exclusive cognizance of matters within its
jurisdiction, and is supreme within its own sphere. But it does not follow from
the fact that the three powers are to be kept separate and distinct that the
Constitution intended them to be absolutely unrestrained and independent of
each other. The Constitution has provided for an elaborate system of checks and
balances to secure coordination in the workings of the various departments of
the government. And the judiciary in turn, with the Supreme Court as the final
arbiter, effectively checks the other departments in the exercise of its power
to determine the law, and hence to declare executive and legislative acts void
if violative of the Constitution.
The judicial power that is granted to the
Philippine Supreme Court and lower courts, as expressly provided for in the
Constitution, is not just a power but also a duty, and it was given an expanded
definition to include the power to correct any grave abuse of discretion on the
part of any government branch or instrumentality. Our Constitution, though
vesting in the House of Representatives the exclusive power to initiate
impeachment cases, provides for several limitations to the exercise of such
power as embodied in Section 3(2), (3), (4) and (5), Article XI thereof. These
limitations include the manner of filing, required vote to impeach, and the one
year bar on the impeachment of one and the same official. The people expressed
their will when they instituted the above-mentioned safeguards in the Constitution.
This shows that the Constitution did not intend to leave the matter of
impeachment to the sole discretion of Congress. Instead, it provided for
certain well-defined limits, or "judicially discoverable standards"
for determining the validity of the exercise of such discretion, through the
power of judicial review. There is indeed a plethora of cases in which this
Court exercised the power of judicial review over congressional action.
Finally, there exists no constitutional basis for the contention that the
exercise of judicial review over impeachment proceedings would upset the system
of checks and balances. Verily, the Constitution is to be interpreted as a
whole and "one section is not to be allowed to defeat another." Both
are integral components of the calibrated system of independence and
interdependence that insures that no branch of government act beyond the powers
assigned to it by the Constitution.
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