Poe v. Comelec 1
Poe v. Comelec 1
Poe v. Comelec 1
<!Court
Jfmanila
EN BANC
- versus -
COMMISSION. ON ELECTIONS
AND ESTRELLA C. ELAMPARO,
Respondents,
x-------------------------------------------------x
MARY GRACE NATIVIDAD S. POE- G.R. Nos. 221698-700
LLAMANZARES,
Petitioner, Present:
SERENO, C.J.,
CARPIO,
VELASCO, JR.,
LEONARDO-DE CASTRO,
BRION,
PERALTA,
BERSAMIN,
- versus - DEL CASTILLO,
PEREZ,
MENDOZA,
REYES,
PERLAS-BERNABE,
LEONEN,
JARDELEZA,
CAGUIOA, JJ.
DECISION
PEREZ, J.:
The Facts
When petitioner was five (5) years old, celebrity spouses Ronald Allan
Kelley Poe (a.k.a. Fenando Poe, Jr.) and Jesusa Sonora Poe (a.k.a. Susan
Roces) filed a petition for her adoption with the Municipal Trial Court
(MTC) of San Juan City. On 13 May 1974, the trial court granted their
petition and ordered that petitioner's name be changed from "Mary Grace
Natividad Contreras Militar" to "Mary Grace Natividad Sonora Poe."
Although necessary notations were made by OCR-Iloilo on petitioner's
foundling certificate reflecting the court decreed adoption, 2 the petitioner's
adoptive mother discovered only sometime in the second half of 2005 that
the lawyer who handled petitioner's adoption failed to secure from the OCR-
Petition for Certiorari in G.R. Nos. 221698-700, pp. 15-16; COMELEC First Division Resolution
dated 11 December 2015 in SPA No. 15-002 (DC), SPA No. 15-007 (DC) and SPA No. 15-139
(DC), p. 2.
Petition for Certiorari, id. at 16-17;
Decision 3 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
Iloilo a new Certificate of Live Birth indicating petitioner's new name and
the name of her adoptive parents. 3 Without delay, petitioner's mother
executed an affidavit attesting to the lawyer's omission which she submitted
to the OCR-Iloilo. On 4 May 2006, OCR-Iloilo issued a new Certificate of
Live Birth in the name of Mary Grace Natividad Sonora Poe. 4
While in the U.S., the petitioner gave birth to her eldest child Brian
Daniel (Brian) on 16 April 1992. 12 Her two daughters Hanna MacKenzie
(Hanna) and Jesusa Anika (Anika) were both born in the Philippines on 10
13
Id.
14
COMELEC First Division Resolution, supra note 10.
15
Id.
16
Supra note I at 17-18.
17
COMELEC First Division Resolution, supra note 10.
18
Id.
19
Id.
20
Petition for Certiorari, supra note 1 at 20.
21
Id.
22
Supra note 3.
23
Supra note 20.
24
Supra note 3.
Decision 5 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
Internal Revenue. Her three (3) children immediately followed 25 while her
husband was forced to stay in the U.S. to complete pending projects as well
as to arrange the sale of their family home there. 26
The petitioner and her children briefly stayed at her mother's place
until she and her husband purchased a condominium unit with a parking slot
at One Wilson Place Condominium in San Juan City in the second half of
2005. 27 The corresponding Condominium Certificates of Title covering the
unit and parking slot were issued by the Register of Deeds of San Juan City
to petitioner and her husband on 20 February 2006. 28 Meanwhile, her
children of school age began attending Philippine private schools.
25
Supra note 20.
26
Supra note 3.
27
Petition for Certiorari, supra note 4.
28
Id.
29
Id. at 23; COMELEC First Divi3ion Resolution, supra note 3.
30
Id.; id.
31
Id.; id.
32
Id.; id.
33
Id. at 23-24; COMELEC First Division Resolution, supra note I at 5.
34
Id. at 24; id.
35
Id.
36
Supra note 34.
Decision 6 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
she filed with the Bureau of Immigration (BI) a sworn petition to reacquire
Philippine citizenship together with petitions for derivative citizenship on
behalf of her three minor children on 10 July 2006. 37 As can be gathered
from its 18 July 2006 Order, the BI acted favorably on petitioner's petitions
and declared that she is deemed to have reacquired her Philippine citizenship
while her children are considered as citizens of the Philippines. 38
Consequently, the BI issued Identification Certificates (ICs) in petitioner's
name and in the names of her three (3) children. 39
xx xx
3. Those appointed to any public office shall subscribe and swear to an oath of allegiance
to the Republic of the Philippines and its duly constituted authorities prior to their
assumption of office: Provided, That they renounce their oath of allegiance to the country
where they took that oath;
xx xx
46
Petition for Certiorari, supra note 1 at 27.
47
Id. at 29.
48
Supra note 46; supra note 1 at 6.
Decision 7 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
On 12 July 2011, the petitioner executed before the Vice Consul of the
U.S. Embassy in Manila an "Oath/Affirmation of Renunciation of
Nationality of the United States."49 On that day, she accomplished a sworn
questionnaire before the U.S. Vice Consul wherein she stated that she had
taken her oath as MTRCB Chairperson on 21 October 2010 with the intent,
among others, of relinquishing her American citizenship.so In the same
questionnaire, the petitioner stated that she had resided outside of the U.S.,
specifically in the Philippines, from 3 September 1968 to 29 July 1991 and
from May 2005 to present.s 1
On 15 October 2015, petitioner filed her COC for the Presidency for
the May 2016 Elections. s6 In her COC, the petitioner declared that she is a
natural-born citizen and that her residence in the Philippines up to the day
before 9 May 2016 would be ten (10) years and eleven (11) months counted
from 24 May 2005.s 7 The petitioner attached to her COC an "Affidavit
Affirming Renunciation of U.S.A. Citizenship" subscribed and sworn to
before a notary public in Quezon City on 14 October 2015. ss
i
51
Supra note 48.
52
Petition for Certiorari, supra note 1 at 31; COMELEC First Division Resolution, supra note I at 6.
53
Comment, supra note 5 at 9.
54
Petition for Certiorari, supra note I at 31.
55
Id. at 32; Comment, supra note 53 at 10.
56
Id.; First Division Resolution, supra note 1 at 6.
57
Id.; td. at 7.
58
Id.; id.
Decision 8 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
A day after petitioner filed her COC for President, Estrella Elamparo
(Elamparo) filed a petition to deny due course or cancel said COC which
was docketed as SPA No. 15-001 (DC) and raffled to the COMELEC Second
Division. 59 She is convinced that the COMELEC has jurisdiction over her
petition. 60 Essentially, Elamparo's contention is that petitioner committed
material misrepresentation when she stated in her COC that she is a natural-
born Filipino citizen and that she is a resident of the Philippines for at least
ten (10) years and eleven (11) months up to the day before the 9 May 2016
. 61
El ect1ons.
59
Comment (on the Petition in G.R. No. 221697) filed by respondent Elamparo, dated January 6,
2016, p. 7.
60
COMELEC Second Division Resolution dated December 1, 2015 in SPA No. 15-001 (DC), p. 7.
61
Id. at 7-8.
62
Supra note 60.
63
Id.
64
Id. at 8.
65
Id.
66
Petition for Certiorari in GR. No. 221697, p. 7.
67
Supra note 64.
Decision 9 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
(1) the COMELEC did not have jurisdiction over Elamparo's petition
as it was actually a petition for quo warranto which could only be
filed if Grace Poe wins in the Presidential elections, and that the
Department of Justice (DOJ) has primary jurisdiction to revoke the
BI's July 18, 2006 Order;
(2) the petition failed to state a cause of action because it did not
contain allegations which, if hypothetically admitted, would make
false the statement in her COC that she is a natural-born Filipino
citizen nor was there any allegation that there was a willful or
deliberate intent to misrepresent on her part;
(3) she did not make any material misrepresentation in the COC
regarding her citizenship and residency qualifications for:
This case stemmed from three (3) separate petitions filed by Francisco
S. Tatad (Tatad), Antonio P. Contreras (Contreras) and Amado D. Valdez
(Valdez) against petitioner before the COMELEC which were consolidated
and raffled to its First Division.
at 8-11.
69
COMELEC Second Division Resolution, supra note 60 at 34.
70
Comment, supra note 59 at 10.
71
Section 1 of Rule 25 of the COMELEC Rules of Procedure, as amended, states:
Section 1. Grounds. - Any candidate who, in an action or protest in which he is a party, is declared
by final decision of a competent court, guilty of, or found by the Commission to be suffering from
any disqualification provided by law or the Constitution.
73
Id., at 9 and 14.
74
Id. at 10.
75
Id. at 12.
76
Id. at 11.
77
COMELEC First Division Resolution, supra note 1 at 8.
78
Id.
79
Petition to Disqualify, supra note 72 at 11.
80
Id. at 21.
81
Id.
82
Id.
Decision 12 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
t
Sec. 78. Petition to deny due course to or cancel a certificate of candidacy. - A verified petition
seeking to deny due course or to cancel a certificate of candidacy may be filed by the person
exclusively on the ground that any material representation contained therein as required under
Section 74 hereof is false. The petition may be filed at any time not later than twenty-five days
from the time of the filing of the certificate of candidacy and shall be decided, after due notice and
hearing, not later than fifteen days before the election.
86
Petition for Cancellation of Grace Poe's COC dated 17 October 2015 filed by Contreras in SPA
No. 15-007 (DC), pp. 2-4.
87
Id. at 3; Petition for Certiorari, supra note l at 13.
88
Id. at 3-4.
Decision 13 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
a cause of action. His petition did not invoke grounds proper for a
disqualification case as enumerated under Sections 12 and 68 of the
Omnibus Election Code. 89 Instead, Tatad completely relied on the alleged
lack of residency and natural-born status of petitioner which are not among
the recognized grounds for the disqualification of a candidate to an elective
90
office.
Second, the petitions filed against her are basically petitions for quo
warranto as they focus on establishing her ineligibility for the Presidency. 91
A petition for quo warranto falls within the exclusive jurisdiction of the
92
Presidential Electoral Tribunal (PET) and not the COMELEC.
89
Sections 12 and 68 of the Omnibus Election Code provide:
Sec. 12. Disqualifications. -Any person who has been declared by competent authority
insane or incompetent, or has been sentenced by final judgment for subversion, insurrection,
rebellion or for any offense for which he has been sentenced to a penalty of more than eighteen
months or for a crime involving moral turpitude, shall be disqualified to be a candidate and to hold
any office, unless he has been given plenary pardon or granted amnesty.
Fifth, she claimed that as a natural-born citizen, she has every right to
be repatriated under R.A. No. 9225 or the right to reacquire her natural-born
status. 96 Moreover, the official acts of the Philippine Government enjoy the
presumption of regularity, to wit: the issuance of the 18 July 2006 Order of
the BI declaring her as natural-born citizen, her appointment as MTRCB
Chair and the issuance of the decree of adoption of San Juan RTC. 97 She
believed that all these acts reinforced her position that she is a natural-born
98
citizen of the Philippines.
Sixth, she maintained that as early as the first quarter of 2005, she
started reestablishing her domicile of choice in the Philippines as
demonstrated by her children's resettlement and schooling in the country,
purchase of a condominium unit in San Juan City and the construction of
their family home in Corinthian Hills. 99
Seventh, she insisted that she could legally reestablish her domicile of
choice in the Philippines even before she renounced her American
citizenship as long as the three determinants for a change of domicile are
complied with. 100 She reasoned out that there was no requirement that
renunciation of foreign citizenship is a prerequisite for the acquisition of a
new dom1c1. 1 e o f ch 01ce.
. IOI
96
Id.
97
Id.
98
Id.
99
Id.at9-10.
100
Id.atlO.
IOI
Id.
102
Id.
103
The 11 December 2015 Resolution of the COMELEC First Division was concurred in by
Commissioners Louie Tito F. Guia and Ma. Rowena Amelia V. Guanzon. Presiding Commissioner
Christian Robert S. Lim issued a Separate Dissenting Opinion.
Decision 15 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
(1) Enforce and administer all laws and regulations relative to the conduct of
an election, plebiscite, initiative, referendum, and recall.
(2) Exercise exclusive original jurisdiction over all contests relating to the
elections, returns, and qualifications of all elective regional, provincial,
and city officials, and appellate jurisdiction over all contests involving
elective municipal officials decided by trial courts of general jurisdiction,
or involving elective barangay officials decided by trial courts of limited
jurisdiction.
(3)Decide, except those involving the right to vote, all questions affecting
elections, including determination of the number and location of polling
places, appointment of election officials and inspectors, and registration of
t
voters.
The Supreme Court, sitting en bane, shall be the sole judge of all
contests relating to the election, returns, and qualifications of the President
or Vice-President, and may promulgate its rules for the purpose.
104
318 Phil. 329 ( 1995).
!05
595 Phil. 449 (2008).
Decision 19 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
Omnibus Election Code and in 40 of the Local Government Code and are
for the purpose of barring an individual from becoming a candidate or
from continuing as a candidate for public office. In a word, their purpose
is to eliminate a candidate from the race either from the start or during its
progress. "Ineligibility," on the other hand, refers to the lack of the
qualifications prescribed in the Constitution or the statutes for holding
public office and the purpose of the proceedings for declaration of
ineligibility is to remove the incumbent from office.
Grounds for disqualification. -Any candidate who does not possess all the
qualifications of a candidate as provided for by the Constitution or by
existing law or who commits any act declared by law to be grounds for
disqualification may be disqualified from continuing as a candidate. 107
!06
107
Romualdez-Marcos v. COMELEC, supra note 104 at 396-397.
Id. at 397-398; Fermin v. COMELEC, supra note 105 at 471-472.
t
Decision 21 G.R. NOS. 221697
& 221698-700
(I) Those who are citizens of the Philippine Islands at the time of the adoption of this
Constitution,
(2) Those born in the Philippine Islands of foreign parents who, before the adoption of this
Constitution, had been elected to public office in the Philippine Islands.
(3) Those whose fathers are citizens of the Philippines.
(4) Those whose mothers are citizens of the Philippines and, upon reaching the age of
majority, elect Philippine citizenship.
(5) Those who are naturalized in accordance with law.
Section 2. Philippine citizenship may be Jost or reacquired in the manner provided by Jaw.
Decision 22 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
proceeded to say that "she now has the burden to present evidence to prove
her natural filiation with a Filipino parent."
The factual issue is not who the parents of petitioner are, as their
identities are unknown, but whether such parents are Filipinos. Under
Section 4, Rule 128:
female foreigners or 99.68/o. In the same year, there were 210,349 Filipino
males and 886 male aliens, or 99.58/o. In 1970, there were 270,299 Filipino
females versus 1, 190 female aliens, or 99.56%. That same year, there were
245,740 Filipino males as against only 1,165 male aliens or 99.53/o.
COMELEC did not dispute these figures. Notably, Commissioner Arthur
Lim admitted, during the oral arguments, that at the time petitioner was
found in 1968, the majority of the population in Iloilo was Filipino. 112
t
would be a natural born Filipino is 99.93%.
112
Transcipt of Stenographic Notes, 9 February 2016, p. 40.
113
Section 3 (y), Rule 131.
Decision 24 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
114
115
236 Phil. 307 (1987).
Id. at314-315. i
Decision 25 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
xx xx
Sr. Montinola: But that is the interpretation of the law, therefore, there
is no [more] need for amendment.
Though the Rafols amendment was not carried out, it was not because
there was any objection to the notion that persons of "unknown parentage"
are not citizens but only because their number was not enough to merit
specific mention. Such was the account, 117 cited by petitioner, of delegate
and constitution law author Jose Aruego who said:
We all know that the Rafols proposal was rejected. But note that
what was declined was the proposal for a textual and explicit recognition
of foundlings as Filipinos. And so, the way to explain the constitutional
116
117
English translation of the Spanish original presented in the petitioner's pleadings before the
COMELEC and this Court. The COMELEC and private respondents have not disputed the
accuracy and correctness of the translation.
I Jose M. Aruego, The Framing of the Philippine Constitution 209 (1949).
l
Decision 27 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
silence is by saying that it was the view of Montinola and Roxas which
prevailed that there is no more need to expressly declare foundlings as
Filipinos.
The Solicitor General makes the further point that the framers
"worked to create a just and humane society," that "they were reasonable
patriots and that it would be unfair to impute upon them a discriminatory
intent against foundlings." He exhorts that, given the grave implications of
the argument that foundlings are not natural-born Filipinos, the Court must
search the records of the 1935, 1973 and 1987 Constitutions "for an express
intention to deny foundlings the status of Filipinos. The burden is on those
who wish to use the constitution to discriminate against foundlings to show
that the constitution really intended to take this path to the dark side and
inflict this across the board marginalization."
118
TSN, 16 February 2016, pp. 20-21.
Decision 28 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
Recent legislation is more direct. R.A. No. 8043 entitled "An Act
Establishing the Rules to Govern the Inter-Country Adoption of Filipino
Children and For Other Purposes" (otherwise known as the "Inter-Country
Adoption Act of 1995"), R.A. No. 8552, entitled "An Act Establishing the
Rules and Policies on the Adoption of Filipino Children and For Other
Purposes" (otherwise known as the Domestic Adoption Act of 1998) and this
Court's A.M. No. 02-6-02-SC or the "Rule on Adoption," all expressly refer
to "Filipino children" and include foundlings as among Filipino children
who may be adopted.
It has been argued that the process to determine that the child is a
foundling leading to the issuance of a foundling certificate under these laws
and the issuance of said certificate are acts to acquire or perfect Philippine
citizenship which make the foundling a naturalized Filipino at best. This is
erroneous. Under Article IV, Section 2 "Natural-born citizens are those who
are citizens of the Philippines from birth without having to perform any act
to acquire or perfect their Philippine citizenship." In the first place, "having
119
117 Phil. 976 (1963).
120
Id. at 978-979.
Decision 29 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
to perform an act" means that the act must be personally done by the citizen.
In this instance, the determination of foundling status is done not by the
child but by the authorities. 121 Secondly, the object of the process is the
determination of the whereabouts of the parents, not the citizenship of the
child. Lastly, the process is certainly not analogous to naturalization
proceedings to acquire Philippine citizenship, or the election of such
citizenship by one born of an alien father and a Filipino mother under the
1935 Constitution, which is an act to perfect it.
which are "basic to legal systems generally," 127 such as "general principles
of equity, i.e., the general principles of fairness and justice," and the "general
principle against discrimination" which is embodied in the "Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights, the International Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, the Convention Against
Discrimination in Education, the Convention (No. 111) Concerning
Discrimination in Respect of Employment and Occupation." 128 These are
the same core principles which underlie the Philippine Constitution itself, as
embodied in the due process and equal protection clauses of the Bill of
. hts. 129
R 1g
Article 7
1. The child shall be registered immediately after birth and shall have the
right from birth to a name, the right to acquire a nationality and as far as
possible, the right to know and be cared for by his or her parents.
127
128
129
130
International School Alliance of Educators v. Quisumbing, 388 Phil. 661, 672-673 (2000).
CONSTITUTION, Art. III, Sec. I.
Rep. of the Philippines v. Sandiganbayan, 454 Phil. 504, 545 (2003).
t
Pharmaceutical and Health Care Assoc. of the Philippines v. Duque Ill, 561 Phil. 386, 400 (2007).
Decision 31 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
Article 24
1. Every child shall have, without any discrimination as to race, colour, sex,
language, religion, national or social origin, property or birth, the right, to
such measures of protection as are required by his status as a minor, on the
part of his family, society and the State.
2. Every child shall be registered immediately after birth and shall have a
name.
Article 14
A child whose parents are both unknown shall have the nationality
of the country of birth. If the child's parentage is established, its
nationality shall be determined by the rules applicable in cases where the
parentage is known.
Article 2
That the Philippines is not a party to the 1930 Hague Convention nor
to the 1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness does not mean that
their principles are not binding. While the Philippines is not a party to the
1930 Hague Convention, it is a signatory to the Universal Declaration on
Human Rights, Article 15(1) ofwhich 131 effectively affirms Article 14 of the
1930 Hague Convention. Article 2 of the 1961 "United Nations Convention
on the Reduction of Statelessness" merely "gives effect" to Article 15(1) of
the UDHR. 132 In Razon v. Tagitis, 133 this Court noted that the Philippines
had not signed or ratified the "International Convention for the Protection of
All Persons from Enforced Disappearance." Yet, we ruled that the
proscription against enforced disappearances in the said convention was
nonetheless binding as a "generally accepted principle of international law."
Razon v. Tagitis is likewise notable for declaring the ban as a generally
accepted principle of international law although the convention had been
ratified by only sixteen states and had not even come into force and which
needed the ratification of a minimum of twenty states. Additionally, as
petitioner points out, the Court was content with the practice of international
and regional state organs, regional state practice in Latin America, and State
Practice in the United States.
Our approach in Razon and Mijares effectively takes into account the
fact that "generally accepted principles of international law" are based not
only on international custom, but also on "general principles of law
recognized by civilized nations," as the phrase is understood in Article 38.1
paragraph (c) of the ICJ Statute. Justice, fairness, equity and the policy
against discrimination, which are fundamental principles underlying the Bill
131
"Everyone has the right to a nationality."
132
See Introductory Note to the United Nations Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness issued
by the United Nations High Commissioner on Refugees.
t
133
Supra note 124.
134
Supra note 126.
135
Id. at 392; See footnote No. 55 of said case.
Decision 33 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
of Rights and which are "basic to legal systems generally," 136 support the
notion that the right against enforced disappearances and the recognition of
foreign judgments, were correctly considered as "generally accepted
principles of international law" under the incorporation clause.
Adopting these legal principles from the 1930 Hague Convention and
the 1961 Convention on Statelessness is rational and reasonable and
consistent with the }us sanguinis regime in our Constitution. The
presumption of natural-born citizenship of foundlings stems from the
presumption that their parents are nationals of the Philippines. As the
empirical data provided by the PSA show, that presumption is at more than
99% and is a virtual certainty.
136
137
Pharmaceutical and Health Care Assoc. of the Philippines v. Duque III, supra note 127.
See Exhibits 38 and 39-series. [
Decision 34 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
.... the total effect of those documents is to signify to this Honorable Court
that those treaties and conventions were drafted because the world
community is concerned that the situation of foundlings renders them
legally invisible. It would be tragically ironic if this Honorable Court
ended up using the international instruments which seek to protect and
uplift foundlings a tool to deny them political status or to accord them
..
second -c1ass c1t1zens h.1p. 138
The COMELEC also ruled 139 that petitioner's repatriation in July 2006
under the provisions of R.A. No. 9225 did not result in the reacquisition of
natural-born citizenship. The COMELEC reasoned that since the applicant
must perform an act, what is reacquired is not "natural-born" citizenship but
only plain "Philippine citizenship."
R.A. No. 9225 is a repatriation statute and has been described as such
in several cases. They include Sobejana-Condon v. COMELEC 141 where we
described it as an "abbreviated repatriation process that restores one's
Filipino citizenship x x x." Also included is Parreno v. Commission on
Audit, 142 which cited Tabasa v. Court ofAppeals, 143 where we said that "[t]he
repatriation of the former Filipino will allow him to recover his natural-born
citizenship. Parreno v. Commission on Audit144 is categorical that "if
petitioner reacquires his Filipino citizenship (under R.A. No. 9225), he will
... recover his natural-born citizenship."
138
Opening Statement of the Solicitor General, p. 6.
139
First Division resolution dated 11 December 20 I 5, upheld in toto by the COMELEC En Banc.
140
409 Phil. 633, 649 (200 I).
141
692 Phil. 407, 420 (2012).
142
551 Phil. 368, 381 (2007).
143
53 I Phil. 407, 4 I 7 (2006).
144
Supra note I 42.
Decision 35 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
145
Supra note 140 at 646.
146
Id. at 651.
147
G.R. No. 217126-27, 10 November 2015.
Decision 36 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
Lastly, it was repeatedly pointed out during the oral arguments that
petitioner committed a falsehood when she put in the spaces for "born to" in
her application for repatriation under R.A. No. 9225 the names of her
adoptive parents, and this misled the BI to presume that she was a natural-
bom Filipino. It has been contended that the data required were the names
of her biological parents which are precisely unknown.
On Residence
148
Id.
149
Implementing Rules and Regulations of Republic Act No. 8552, Art. VI, Sec. 33.
150
Republic Act No. 8552 (1998), Sec. 14.
151
Republic Act No. 8552 (1998), Sec. 15.
Decision 37 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
Petitioner's claim that she will have been a resident for ten (10) years
and eleven ( 11) months on the day before the 2016 elections, is true.
When petitioner immigrated to the U.S. in 1991, she lost her original
domicile, which is the Philippines. There are three requisites to acquire a
new domicile: 1. Residence or bodily presence in a new locality; 2. an
intention to remain there; and 3. an intention to abandon the old domicile. 152
To successfully effect a change of domicile, one must demonstrate an actual
removal or an actual change of domicile; a bona fide intention of
abandoning the former place of residence and establishing a new one and
definite acts which correspond with the purpose. In other words, there must
basically be animus manendi coupled with animus non revertendi. The
purpose to remain in or at the domicile of choice must be for an indefinite
period of time; the change of residence must be voluntary; and the residence
at the place chosen for the new domicile must be actual. 153
152
Fernandez v. House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal, 623 Phil. 628, 660 (2009) citing Japzon
v. COMELEC, 596 Phil. 354, 370-372 (2009) further citing Papandayan, Jr. v. COMELEC, 430
Phil. 754, 768-770 (2002) further further citing Romualdez v. RTC, Br. 7, Tacloban City, G.R. No.
104960, 14 September 1993, 226 SCRA408, 415.
153
Domino v. COMELEC, 369 Phil. 798, 819 (1999).
Decision 38 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
The foregoing evidence were undisputed and the facts were even
listed by the COMELEC, particularly in its Resolution in the Tatad,
Contreras and Valdez cases.
But as the petitioner pointed out, the facts in these four cases are very
different from her situation. In Coquilla v. COMELEC, 159 the only evidence
154
TSN, 16 February 2016, p. 120.
155
434 Phil. 861 (2002).
i
156
596 Phil. 354 (2009).
157
G.R. No. 209835, 22 September 2015.
158
G.R. No. 207264, 25 June 2013, 699 SCRA 522.
159
Supra note 155.
Decision 39 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
presented was a community tax certificate secured by the candidate and his
declaration that he would be running in the elections. Japzon v.
COMELEC 160 did not involve a candidate who wanted to count residence
prior to his reacquisition of Philippine citizenship. With the Court decreeing
that residence is distinct from citizenship, the issue there was whether the
candidate's acts after reacquisition sufficed to establish residence. In
Caballero v. COMELEC, 161 the candidate admitted that his place of work
was abroad and that he only visited during his frequent vacations. In Reyes
v. COMELEC, 162 the candidate was found to be an American citizen who had
not even reacquired Philippine citizenship under R.A. No. 9225 or had
renounced her U.S. citizenship. She was disqualified on the citizenship
issue. On residence, the only proof she offered was a seven-month stint as
provincial officer. The COMELEC, quoted with approval by this Court, said
that "such fact alone is not sufficient to prove her one-year residency."
160
Supra note 156.
161
Supra note 157.
162
Supra note 158.
Decision 40 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
was advised by her lawyers in 2015 that residence could be counted from 25
May 2005.
That petitioner could have reckoned residence from a date earlier than
the sale of her U.S. house and the return of her husband is plausible given
the evidence that she had returned a year before. Such evidence, to repeat,
would include her passport and the school records of her children.
It was grave abuse of discretion for the COMELEC to treat the 2012
COC as a binding and conclusive admission against petitioner. It could be
given in evidence against her, yes, but it was by no means conclusive. There
is precedent after all where a candidate's mistake as to period of residence
made in a COC was overcome by evidence. In Romualdez-Marcos v.
COMELEC, 167 the candidate mistakenly put seven (7) months as her period
of residence where the required period was a minimum of one year. We said
that "[i]t is the fact of residence, not a statement in a certificate of candidacy
which ought to be decisive in determining whether or not an individual has
satisfied the constitutions residency qualification requirement." The
COMELEC ought to have looked at the evidence presented and see if
petitioner was telling the truth that she was in the Philippines from 24 May
2005. Had the COMELEC done its duty, it would have seen that the 2012
COC and the 2015 COC both correctly stated the pertinent period of
residency.
167
Supra note I 04 at 326. (Emphasis supplied)
Decision 42 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
For another, it could not be said that petitioner was attempting to hide
anything. As already stated, a petition for quo warranto had been filed
against her with the SET as early as August 2015. The event from which the
COMELEC pegged the commencement of residence, petitioner's
repatriation in July 2006 under R.A. No. 9225, was an established fact to
repeat, for purposes of her senatorial candidacy.
Notably, on the statement of residence of six (6) years and six (6)
months in the 2012 COC, petitioner recounted that this was first brought up
in the media on 2 June 2015 by Rep. Tobias Tiangco of the United
Nationalist Alliance. Petitioner appears to have answered the issue
immediately, also in the press. Respondents have not disputed petitioner's
evidence on this point. From that time therefore when Rep. Tiangco
discussed it in the media, the stated period of residence in the 2012 COC and
the circumstances that surrounded the statement were already matters of
public record and were not hidden.
Petitioner likewise proved that the 2012 COC was also brought up in
the SET petition for quo warranto. Her Verified Answer, which was filed on
1 September 2015, admitted that she made a mistake in the 2012 COC when
she put in six (6) years and six (6) months as she misunderstood the question
and could have truthfully indicated a longer period. Her answer in the SET
case was a matter of public record. Therefore, when petitioner
accomplished her COC for President on 15 October 2015, she could not be
said to have been attempting to hide her erroneous statement in her 2012
COC for Senator which was expressly mentioned in her Verified Answer.
The facts now, if not stretched to distortion, do not show or even hint
at an intention to hide the 2012 statement and have it covered by the 2015
representation. Petitioner, moreover, has on her side this Court's
pronouncement that:
168
Ugdoracion, Jr. v. COMELEC, 575 Phil. 253, 265-266 (2008). t
Decision 43 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
169
In Mitra v. COMELEC, et al., [636 Phil. 753 (201 O)], It was ruled that the residence requirement
can be complied with through an incremental process including acquisition of business interest in
(
the pertinent place and lease of feedmill building as residence.
Decision 44 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
In light of all these, it was arbitrary for the COMELEC to satisfy its
intention to let the case fall under the exclusive ground of false
representation, to consider no other date than that mentioned by petitioner in
her COC for Senator.
170
1. dated 1 December 2015 rendered through the COMELEC Second
COMELEC Resolution dated 11 December2015 in SPA No. 15-002 (DC), pp. 4-5.
i
Decision 45 G.R. Nos. 221697
& 221698-700
SO ORDERED.
REZ
WE CONCUR:
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ANTONIO T. CAR 0 PRESBITE
Associate Justice A ociate Justice
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ESTELA M]PERLAS-BERNABE
Associate Justice Associate Justice
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Associate Justlce
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Associate Justice
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CERTIFICATION