1. Petitioners filed a case challenging the appointment of Gregory Ong as Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, claiming he was not a natural-born Filipino citizen as required by the Constitution based on his birth certificate showing his Chinese parents.
2. The Supreme Court ruled that the petitioners had standing to file the case as people's organizations and taxpayers since it involved the constitutional qualification of citizenship for a Supreme Court appointment.
3. The Court also ruled that the President did not need to be impleaded since the case involved the actions of the Executive Secretary.
4. However, the Court upheld Ong's claim to Filipino citizenship based on records of his father's naturalization and barred Ong
1. Petitioners filed a case challenging the appointment of Gregory Ong as Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, claiming he was not a natural-born Filipino citizen as required by the Constitution based on his birth certificate showing his Chinese parents.
2. The Supreme Court ruled that the petitioners had standing to file the case as people's organizations and taxpayers since it involved the constitutional qualification of citizenship for a Supreme Court appointment.
3. The Court also ruled that the President did not need to be impleaded since the case involved the actions of the Executive Secretary.
4. However, the Court upheld Ong's claim to Filipino citizenship based on records of his father's naturalization and barred Ong
1. Petitioners filed a case challenging the appointment of Gregory Ong as Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, claiming he was not a natural-born Filipino citizen as required by the Constitution based on his birth certificate showing his Chinese parents.
2. The Supreme Court ruled that the petitioners had standing to file the case as people's organizations and taxpayers since it involved the constitutional qualification of citizenship for a Supreme Court appointment.
3. The Court also ruled that the President did not need to be impleaded since the case involved the actions of the Executive Secretary.
4. However, the Court upheld Ong's claim to Filipino citizenship based on records of his father's naturalization and barred Ong
1. Petitioners filed a case challenging the appointment of Gregory Ong as Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, claiming he was not a natural-born Filipino citizen as required by the Constitution based on his birth certificate showing his Chinese parents.
2. The Supreme Court ruled that the petitioners had standing to file the case as people's organizations and taxpayers since it involved the constitutional qualification of citizenship for a Supreme Court appointment.
3. The Court also ruled that the President did not need to be impleaded since the case involved the actions of the Executive Secretary.
4. However, the Court upheld Ong's claim to Filipino citizenship based on records of his father's naturalization and barred Ong
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KILOSBAYAN FOUNDATION AND BANTAY KATARUNGAN
FOUNDATION V. EXEC SECRETARY EDUARDO ERMITA
AND SB JUSTICE GREGORY ONG, G.R. NO 177721 (2007) EN BANC: CJ Puno, Quisumbing, Ynares-Santiago, SandovalGutierrez (on leave), Carpio, Austria-Martinez, Corona, Tinga, Carpio-Morales, Garcia, Chico-Nazario, Nachura, Velasco PONENTE: J. Azcuna NATURE: Petition for certiorari under Rule 65 ROC FACTS: On May 16, 2007, respondent Executive Secretary Ermita announced an appointment in favor of respondent Gregory Ong as Associate Justice of SC to fill up the vacancy created by the retirement of AJ Romeo Callejo Sr. on April 28, 2007. 1. On May 18, 2007, the major publications reported that the appointment was held in abeyance by Malacanang in view of the question relating to the citizenship of Gregory Ong. There was no indication, however, that the appointment has been cancelled by the President 2. Petitioner filed the instant case to contend that the appointment of Ong through respondent Ermita was patently unconstitutional, arbitrary, whimsical and issued with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack of jurisdiction 3. Petitioners claim that Ong is a Chinese citizen based on his birth certificate showing that at the time of his birth on May 25, 1953, his father was Chinese and his mother was also Chinese 4. Petitioners invoke Sec 7(1), Art VIII 1987 Constitution which provides that no personal shall be appointed member of the Supreme Court or any lower collegiate court unless he is a natural-born citizen of the Philippines. Even assuming that Ongs father was finally granted Filipino citizenship by naturalization, such would not make respondent Ong a natural-born Filipino citizen.
5. Petitioners, moreover, assert that said birth
certificate prevails over Ongs new Identification certificate issued by the Bureau of Immigration dated Oct 16, 1996, stating that he is a natural-born Filipino and over the opinion of DOJ Sec Teofisto Guingona since the latter do not have power or authority to alter entries in a birth certificate and that Ongs remedy is an action to correct his citizenship as it appears in his birth certificate 6. On the other hand respondent Ermita contended that the President appointed Ong from among the list of nominees who were duly screened by and bore the imprimatur of the JBC under Sec 8, Art VIII 1987 Constitution. 7. Respondent Ong maintained that he is a natural-born Filipino citizen; that petitioners have no standing to file the suit; and at the issue raised ought to be addressed to the JBC as the Constitutional body mandated to review the qualifications of those it recommends to judicial posts. ISSUE: WON petitioners have legal standing to file the instant case RULING: Yes. RATIO: Petitioners have standing to file the suit simply as peoples organizations and taxpayers since the matter involves an issue of utmost and far-reaching constitutional importance, namely the qualificationthe citizenship of a person to be appointed a member of this Court. Standing has been accorded and recognized in similar instances. ISSUE: WON the President is a necessary party to be impleaded RULING: No. RATIO: Since the suit impleads the Executive Secretary who is the alter ego of the President, there is no need to implead the president as a necessary part. Furthermore, the suit
does not seek to stop the President from extending the
appointment but only the Executive Secretary from releasing it and respondent Ong from accepting the same. ISSUE: WON respondent Ong is a natural-born Filipino citizen
are substantial in character and should be threshed out in a
proper action depending upon the nature of the issues in controversy, and wherein all the parties who may be affected by the entries are notified or represented and evidence is submitted to prove the allegations of the complaint, and proof to the contrary admitted.
HELD: Yes. The SC took judicial notice of the records of
respondents petition to be admitted to the Philippine bar. In his petition, Ong alleged that he is qualified to be admitted to the Philippine bar because he is a Filipino citizen because his father, a Chinese citizen, was naturalized in 1964 when Ong was a minor, and thus, he too became a Filipino citizen.
Sec 2(3) RA 9048 provides that a summary administrative
proceeding to correct clerical or typographical errors in a birth certificate cannot apply to a change in nationality. Substantial corrections to the nationality or citizenship of persons recorded should, therefore, be effected through a petition filed in court under Rule 108 ROC.
It is clear, therefore, that from the records of the Court, Ong
is a naturalized Filipino citizen. The alleged subsequent recognition of his natural-born status by the Bureau of Immigration and DOJ cannot amend the final decision of the trial court stating that Ong and his mother were naturalized along with his father.
DISPOSITIVE: Petition granted as one of injunction against
Ong who is hereby enjoined from accepting an appointment to the position of Associate Justice SC or assuming the position and discharging the functions of that office, until he shall have successfully completed all necessary steps through appropriate adversarial proceedings in court, to show that he is a natural-born Filipino citizen and correct the records of his birth and citizenship
Moreover, no substantial change or correction in an entry in
a civil register can be made without a judicial order, and, under the law, a change in citizenship status is a substantial change. In Labayo-Rowe v. Republic, the SC held that changes which affect the civil status or citizenship of a party