Political Doctrines and Principles
Political Doctrines and Principles
Political Doctrines and Principles
POLITICAL LAW
It is that branch of Public Law which deals with the organization and operations of the governmental organs of
the state and defines its relations with the inhabitants of its territory. (People v. Perfecto GR L18463 October 4, 1922)
It is a general principle of the public law that on acquisition of territory the previous political relations of the
ceded region are totally abrogated. "Political" is here used to denominate the laws regulating the relations
sustained by the inhabitants to the sovereign. xxx Every nation acquiring territory, by treaty or otherwise,
must hold it subject to the Constitution and laws of its own government, and not according to those of the
government ceding it. (Macariola v. Asuncion 114 SCRA 77)
Upon the transfer of sovereignty from Spain to the US and later to RP, the provisions of the Code of
Commerce must be deemed to have been abrogated because where there is a change of sovereignty, the
political laws of the former sovereign, whether compatible or not with those of the new sovereign, are
automatically abrogated, UNLESS they are expressly re-enacted by affirmative act of the new sovereign.
MUNICIPAL LAW
That which pertains solely to the citizens and inhabitants of a State. Deals with the CONDUCT or STATUS of
Individuals, Corporations, and other PRIVATE entities within a particular State.
JUSTICIABLE QUESTION
Implies a given right, legally demandable and enforceable, an act or omission violative of such right, and a
remedy granted and sanctioned by law for said breach of right. (Casibang vs. Aquino, 92 SCRA 642)
CONSTITUTION
The Constitution is the basic and paramount law to which all other laws must conform and to which all
persons, including the highest officials, must defer.
It should be interpreted:
1. Verba Legis ordinary meaning of the words used
2. Ratio legis et anima intent of the framers
3. Ut magis valeat quam pereat as a whole (Francisco vs HR GR160261 11.10.03)
THE 1987 PHILIPPINE CONSTITUTION
It is classified as written, enacted and rigid.
Effectivity: The ConCom completed their task on 12 October 1986 and presented the draft constitution to
President Aquino on October 15, 1986. After a period of nationwide information campaign, a plebiscite for its
ratification was held on FEBRUARY 2, 1987. More than three-fourths of all votes cast, 76.37% (or 17,059,495
voters) favored ratification as against 22.65% (or 5,058,714 voters) who voted against ratification. On
February 11, 1987, the new constitution was proclaimed ratified and took effect. De Leon v. Esguerra - The
1987 Constitution was ratified in a plebiscite on February 2, 1987. By that date, therefore, the Provisional
Constitution must be deemed to have been superseded.
THE PREAMBLE
We, the sovereign Filipino people, imploring the aid of Almighty God, in order to build a just and humane
society, and establish a Government that shall embody our ideals and aspirations, promote the common good,
conserve and develop our patrimony, and secure to ourselves and our posterity, the blessings of independence
and democracy under the rule of law and a regime of truth, justice, freedom, love, equality, and peace, do
ordain and promulgate this Constitution.
TERRITORY
Is a fixed portion of the surface of the Earth inhabited by the people of the State. As an element of the state,
it is an area over which a state has Effective Control.
ARCHIPELAGIC DOCTRINE
The waters, around between and connecting different islands of the Archipelago, regardless of their breadth or
dimensions, form part of the internal waters of the Philippines. (Article I 2nd Sentence.)
Integration of a group of islands to the sea and their oneness so that together they can constitute one unit,
one country, and one state.
An imaginary single baseline is drawn around the islands by joining appropriate points of the outermost islands
of the archipelago with straight lines and all islands and waters enclosed within the baseline form part of the
territory.
Purpose: [1] Territorial Integrity, [2] National Security, [3] Economic Reasons.
THALWEG DOCTRINE
For boundary rivers, in the absence of an agreement between the riparian states, the boundary line is laid on
the middle of the main navigable channel.
STATE
It is a community of persons more or less numerous (PEOPLE), permanently occupying a definite portion of
TERRITORY, independent of external control (SOVEREIGNTY), and possessing an organized GOVERNMENT to
which the great body of inhabitants render habitual obedience.
State v. Nation : State is a legal concept ; Nation is a ethnic concept.
PEOPLE
as an element of a state, simply means a community of persons sufficient in number and capable of
maintaining the continued existence of the community and held together by a common bond of law. It is of no
legal consequence if they possess diverse racial, cultural, or economic interest. (Bernas Comprehensive
Reviewer 2011). People as used in the Constitution: [1] as Inhabitants - Article II, Section 15, 16; Article III,
Section 2; Article XIII, Section 1; [2] as Electors - Article VII, Section 4; Article XVI, Section 2; Article XVIII,
Section 25); [3] as Citizens - Article II, Section 4; Article III, Section 7.
SOVEREIGNTY supreme and uncontrollable power inherent in a Sate by which the state is governed.
Legal is the supreme power to affect legal interests either by legislative, executive or judicial action. Lodged
in the people but normally exercised by state agencies.
Political is the sum total of all the influences in a state, legal and non-legal, which determine the course of
law.
Internal Sovereignty refers to the power of the State to control its domestic affairs. It is the supreme power
over everything within its territory.
External Sovereignty Also known as INDEPENDECE, which is freedom from external control. It is the power
of the State to direct its relations with other States.
GOVERNMENT is that institution or aggregate of institutions by which an independent society makes and
carries out those rules of action which are necessary to enable men to live in a social state or which are
imposed upon the people forming that society by those who possess the power or authority of prescribing
them. (US v. Dorr 2 Phil 332)
Functions: [1] Constituent compulsory because it constitute the very bonds of society.
[2] Ministrant undertaken to advance general interest of society
Classification: De jure has rightful title but no power or control, either:
a] because same has been withdrawn from it; OR
b] because same has not yet actually entered into the exercise thereof.
De facto actually exercises power or control but without legal title.
It was held in Lawyers League for a Better Philippines v. Corazon Aquino that the people have made the
judgment; they have accepted the government of President Corazon Aquino which is in effective control of the
entire country so that it is not merely a de facto government but in fact and law a de jure government.
Moreover, the community of nations has recognized the legitimacy of the present government.
DOCTRINE OF INCORPORATION
The rules of international law form part of the law of the land and no legislative action is required to make
them applicable to a country. The Philippines follows this doctrine, because Section 2. Article II of the
constitution states that the Philippines adopts the generally accepted principles of international law as part of
the law of the land. However, the doctrine dictates that rules of international law are given equal standing
with, and are not superior to, national legislative enactments.
DOCTRINE OF AUTOLIMITATION
The doctrine where the Philippines adheres to principles of international law as a limitation to the exercise of
its sovereignty.
JUDICIAL POWER
Judicial power is the authority to settle justiciable controversies or disputes involving rights that are
enforceable and demandable before the courts of justice or the redress of wrongs for violations of such rights.
Vested in the Supreme Court and such lower courts as may be established by law. Since the courts are given
judicial power and nothing more, courts may neither attempt to assume or be compelled to perform non-
judicial functions. They may not be charged with administrative functions except when reasonably incidental to
the fulfillment of their duties.
JUDICIAL REVIEW
The power of the SC to declare a law, treaty, ordinance and other governmental act unconstitutional.
Requisites: [1] Actual Case or Controversy; [2] Proper Party (Locus Standi); [3] Earliest Opportunity; [4]
Necessity of deciding constitutional questions
A mere change in PROCEDURAL REMEDIES which does not change the substance of the contract, and which
still leaves an efficacious remedy for enforcement does NOT impair the obligation of contracts.
A valid exercise of police power is superior to obligation of contracts.
SEPARATION OF POWERS DOCTRINE
This principle operated as an implicit limitation on legislative powers as on the two other powers. In essence,
separation of powers means the legislation belongs to Congress, execution to the executive, settlement of
legal controversies to the judiciary. Each is prevented from invading the domain of the others. But the
separation is not total. The system allows for checks and balances the net effect of which being that, in
general, no one department is able to act without the cooperation of at least one of the other departments.
Purpose: To prevent concentration of powers in one department and thereby to avoid tyranny. The purpose
was not to avoid friction, but, by means of the inevitable friction incident to the distribution of governmental
powers among the three departments, to save the people from autocracy.
[1] To secure action; [2] To forestall overaction; [3] To prevent despotism; and [4] To obtain efficiency
EXECUTIVE PRIVILEGE
It is the power of the President to withhold certain types of information from the public, the courts,
and the Congress.
ART. VI Section 22. The heads of departments may, upon their own initiative, with the consent of the
President, or upon the request of either House, as the rules of each House shall provide, appear before and be
heard by such House on any matter pertaining to their departments. Written questions shall be submitted to
the President of the Senate or the Speaker of the House of Representatives at least three days before their
scheduled appearance. Interpellations shall not be limited to written questions, but may cover matters related
thereto. When the security of the State or the public interest so requires and the President so states in writing,
the appearance shall be conducted in executive session.
MONSANTO DOCTRINE
One who is given pardon has no demandable right to reinstatement. He may however be reappointed.
The general rule is supported by Article 7 of the Civil Code, which provides:
Art. 7. Laws are repealed only by subsequent ones, and their violation or non-observance shall not be excused
by disuse or custom or practice to the contrary.
The doctrine of operative fact serves as an exception to the aforementioned general rule. In Planters Products,
Inc. v. Fertiphil Corporation, we held:
The doctrine of operative fact, as an exception to the general rule, only applies as a matter of equity
and fair play. It nullifies the effects of an unconstitutional law by recognizing that the existence of a
statute prior to a determination of unconstitutionality is an operative fact and may have consequences
which cannot always be ignored. The past cannot always be erased by a new judicial declaration.
The doctrine is applicable when a declaration of unconstitutionality will impose an undue burden on those who
have relied on the invalid law. Thus, it was applied to a criminal case when a declaration of unconstitutionality
would put the accused in double jeopardy or would put in limbo the acts done by a municipality in reliance
upon a law creating it.
In that case, this Court further held that the Operative Fact Doctrine will not be applied as an exception
when to rule otherwise would be iniquitous and would send a wrong signal that an act may be justified when
based on an unconstitutional provision of law.
DOCTRINE OF NON-INTERFERENCE
Regarded as an elementary principle of higher importance in the administration of justice that the judgment of
a court of competent jurisdiction may not be opened, modified, or vacated by any court of concurrent
jurisdiction (30-A Am Jur 605).
DOCTRINE OF RATIFICATION
Although the act of a public officer may not be binding on the State because he has exercised his powers
defectively, his acts may be ratified.
Exceptions:
[1] Where there is a want of power in the public officer to perform the original act
[2] The actwas absolutely void at the time. However if the act is merely voidable, it can be rendered
valid
[3] If the principal himself could not lawfully have done the act, or if it could not have been lawfully
done by anyone.
Inappropriate Provisions
- Repeal of laws. Repeal of laws should not be done in appropriation act but in a separate law (PHILCONSA v.
Enriquez) (use this doctrine carefully)
DOCTRINE OF AUGMENTATION
Prohibition against transfer of appropriations, however the following may, by law, be authorized to
augment any item in the general appropriations law for their respective offices from savings in other
items of their respective appropriations:
1. President
2. Senate President
3. Speaker of the House
4. Chief Justice
5. Heads of Constitutional Commissions.
OVER-BREADTH DOCTRINE
Decrees that a governmental purpose may not be achieved by means which sweep unnecessarily, broadly and
thereby invade the area of protected freedoms.
A law is vague as not to satisfy the due process need for notice when it lacks comprehensible standards that
men of common intelligence must necessarily guess as to its meaning and differ as to its application or is so
indefinite that it encourages arbitrary and erratic arrests and convictions.
It is injustice to the accused in placing him on trial for an offense, the nature of which he is given no fair
warning.
MIRANDA DOCTRINE
The Miranda Doctrine or the Miranda Warning provides that:
1. A person in custody must be informed at the outset in clear and unequivocal terms that he has the right to
remain silent and that anything he says can and will be used against him in a court of law;
2. He or she has the right to consult with a lawyer and to have a lawyer with him during the interrogation;
3. If he cannot afford a lawyer, like if he is an indigent, a lawyer shall be appointed by the State to represent
him;
4. His right to counsel is available at any stage of the interrogation, hence, even if he consents to answer
questions without the assistance of counsel, the moment he asks for a lawyer at any point of the investigation,
the interrogation must cease until an attorney is present. If the above are not observed, the evidence obtained
therefrom shall not be admissible in court.
Cabo vs. Sandiganbayan, G.R. No. 169509, June 16, 2006, for double jeopardy to attach, the case
against the accused must have been dismissed or otherwise terminated without his express consent by a court
of competent jurisdiction, upon a valid information sufficient in form and substance and the accused pleaded
to the said charge.
MELO DOCTRINE
The rule of identity does not apply when the second offense was not in existence at the time of the first
prosecution, for the simple reason that in such case, there is no possibility for the accused, during the first
prosecution, to be convicted for an offense that was then inexistent. Thus, where the accused was charged
with physical injuries and after conviction, the injured person dies, the charged for homicide against the same
accused does not put him twice in jeopardy.
DOCTRINE OF COMMAND RESPONSIBILITY
Superior officer is liable for acts of subordinate when:
1. he negligently or willfully employs or retains unfit or incompetent subordinates
2. he negligently or willfully fails to require subordinate to conform to prescribed regulations
3. he negligently or carelessly oversees business of office as to furnish subordinate an opportunity for default
4. he directed or authorized or cooperated in the wrong
5. law makes himself expressly liable
VARIANCE DOCTRINE
Is that a crime charged includes crime proved, convict of crime proved. Also applies when crime proved
includes crime charged, convict of crime charged.
REGALIAN DOCTRINE
All lands of the public domain, waters, minerals, coal, petroleum and other minerals oils, all forces of potential
energy, fisheries, forests, or timber, wildlife, flora, and fauna and natural resources belong to the State. With
the exception of agricultural lands, all other natural resources shall not be alienated. (Sec. 2 Art XII)
STEWARDSHIP DOCTRINE
Private property is supposed to be held by the individual only as a trustee for the people in general, who are
its real owners.
DOCTRINE OF TRANSFORMATION
The generally accepted rules of international law are not per se binding upon the State but must first be
embodied in legislation enacted by the lawmaking body and so transformed into municipal law. Only when so
transformed will they become binding upon the State as part of its municipal law.
WILSON DOCTRINE
recognition shall not be extended to any government established by revolution or internal violence until the
freely elected representatives of the people have organized a constitutional government.
ESTRADA DOCTRINE
the Mexican government declared that it would, as it saw fit, continue or terminate its diplomatic relations with
any country in which a political upheaval had taken place and in so doing it would not pronounce judgment on
the right of the foreign state to accept, maintain or replace its government. (Cruz, International Law, 2003
ed.) (In view of recent developments, the Wilson doctrine and the Estrada doctrine are no longer in the
mainstream of public international law.)
WILSON/TOBAR DOCTRINE
Precludes recognition of government established by revolution, civil war, coup detat or other forms of internal
violence until freely elected representatives of the people have organized a constitutional government (US
President Woodrow Wilson and Ecuadorian FM) [2004 Bar]
STIMSON DOCTRINE
Precludes recognition of any government established as a result of external aggression (US Sec. Of State
Henry Stimson)
ESTRADA DOCTRINE
Dealing or not dealing with the government established through a political upheaval is not a judgment on the
legitimacy of the said government (Mexican Minister Genaro Estrada) [2004 Bar]
DOCTRINE OF INDELIBLE ALLEGIANCE
an individual may be compelled to retain his original nationality although he has already renounced it under
the laws of another state whose nationality he has acquired
Doctrine of adherence to judicial precedents. Also called the Doctrine of stare decisis.
[The] doctrine [that] enjoins adherence to judicial precedents. It requires courts in a country to follow the rule
established in a decision of its Sup. Court. That decision becomes a judicial precedent to be followed in
subsequent cases by all courts in the land. [Phil. Guardians Brotherhood, Inc. (PGBI) v. Comelec, GR 190529,
Apr. 29, 2010].
Doctrine of caveat emptor. Also called the Doctrine of let the buyer beware.
A warning that notifies a buyer that the goods he or she is buying are as is, or subject to all defects. The
principle under which the buyer could not recover damages from the seller for defects on the property that
rendered the property unfit for ordinary purposes. The only exception was if the seller actively concealed
latent defects or otherwise made material misrepresentations amounting to fraud.
Doctrine of completeness.
[The doctrine holding that] a dying declaration to be admissible must be complete in itself. To be complete in
itself does not mean that the declarant must recite everything that constituted the res gestae of the subject of
his statement, but that his statement of any given fact should be a full expression of all that he intended to
say as conveying his meaning in respect of such fact. [People v. De Joya, GR 75028, Nov. 8, 1991].
Doctrine of equivalents.
The rule stating that an infringement also takes place when a device appropriates a prior invention by
incorporating its innovative concept and, although with some modification and change, performs substantially
the same function in substantially the same way to achieve substantially the same result. [Smith Kline and
Beckman Corp. v. CA, 409 SCRA 33].
Doctrine of forum non-conveniens. Lat. The forum is inconvenient. Priv. Internatl. Law.
[A rule designed] to deter the practice of global forum shopping, [Coquia and Aguiling-Pangalangan, Conflicts
Of Laws, pp. 40-41, 2000 Ed.] that is to prevent non-resident litigants from choosing the forum or place
wherein to bring their suit for malicious reasons, such as to secure procedural advantages, to annoy and
harass the defendant, to avoid overcrowded dockets, or to select a more friendly venue. Under this doctrine, a
court, in conflicts of law cases, may refuse impositions on its jurisdiction where it is not the most convenient
or available forum and the parties are not precluded from seeking remedies elsewhere. [First Phil. Internatl.
Bank v. CA, 252 SCRA 259, 281 (1996).].
Doctrine of hold-over.
The doctrine under which a public officer whose term has expired or services have been terminated is allowed
to continue holding his office until his successor is appointed or chosen and had qualified.
2. The restrictive application of State immunity is proper when the proceedings arise out of commercial
transactions of the foreign sovereign, its commercial activities or economic affairs. Stated differently, a State
may be said to have descended to the level of an individual and thus can be deemed to have tacitly given its
consent to be used only when it enters into business contracts. It does not apply where the contract relates to
the exercise of its sovereign functions. [US v. Ruiz, GR L-35645, May 22, 1985, 136 SCRA 487, 490].
Doctrine of immutability and inalterability of a final judgment.
The doctrine that has a two-fold purpose: (1) to avoid delay in the administration of justice and thus,
procedurally, to make orderly the discharge of judicial business and (2) to put an end to judicial controversies,
at the risk of occasional errors, which is precisely why courts exist. [SSS v. Isip, GR 165417, Apr. 3, 2007].
Doctrine of last clear chance. Also known as the Doctrine of discovered peril or the Humanitarian
doctrine.
A doctrine in the law of torts which states that the contributory negligence of the party injured will not defeat
the claim for damages if it is shown that the defendant might, by the exercise of reasonable care and
prudence, have avoided the consequences of the negligence of the injured party. In such cases, the person
who had the last clear chance to avoid the mishap is considered in law solely responsible for the consequences
thereof. [Ong v. Metropolitan Water District, 104 Phil. 405 (1958)]. See Last clear chance doctrine.
Doctrine of let the buyer beware. Also called the Doctrine of caveat emptor.
A warning that notifies a buyer that the goods he or she is buying are as is, or subject to all defects. The
principle under which the buyer could not recover damages from the seller for defects on the property that
rendered the property unfit for ordinary purposes. The only exception was if the seller actively concealed
latent defects or otherwise made material misrepresentations amounting to fraud.
Doctrine of non-delegation.
1. [The principle that] delegated power constitutes not only a right but a duty to be performed by the delegate
through the instrumentality of his own judgment and not through the intervening mind of another.
Doctrine of res perit domino. Lat. The thing is lost to the owner.
The doctrine that states that when a thing is lost or destroyed, it is lost to the person who was the owner of it
at the time.
Doctrine of self-help.
The doctrine enunciated in Art. 429 of the Civ. Code which provides: The owner or lawful possessor of a thing
has the right to exclude any person from the enjoyment and disposal thereof. For this purpose, he may use
such force as may be reasonably necessary to repel or prevent an actual or threatened unlawful physical
invasion or usurpation of his property.
Doctrine of separability.
[The doctrine that] enunciates that an arbitration agreement is independent of the main contract. The
arbitration agreement is to be treated as a separate agreement and the arbitration agreement does not
automatically terminate when the contract of which it is part comes to an end. [Gonzales v. Climax Mining
Ltd., GR 161957, Jan. 22, 2007].
Doctrine of stare decisis. Also called the Doctrine of adherence tojudicial precedents.
[The] doctrine [that] enjoins adherence to judicial precedents. It requires courts in a country to follow the rule
established in a decision of its Sup. Court. That decision becomes a judicial precedent to be followed in
subsequent cases by all courts in the land. [Phil. Guardians Brotherhood, Inc. (PGBI) v. Comelec, GR 190529,
Apr. 29, 2010].
Doctrine of stare decisis et non quieta movere. Lat. To adhere to precedents and not to unsettle
things which are established.
The doctrine [that] enjoins adherence to judicial precedents. It requires courts in a country to follow the rule
established in a decision of the Supreme Court thereof. That decision becomes a judicial precedent to be
followed in subsequent cases by all courts in the land. The doctrine of stare decisis is based on the principle
that once a question of law has been examined and decided, it should be deemed settled and closed to further
argument. [Fermin v. People, GR 157643, Mar. 28, 2008, 550 SCRA 132].
Doctrine of subrogation.
The principle [that] covers a situation wherein an insurer [who] has paid a loss under an insurance policy is
entitled to all the rights and remedies belonging to the insured against a 3rd party with respect to any loss
covered by the policy. It contemplates full substitution such that it places the party subrogated in the shoes of
the creditor, and he may use all means that the creditor could employ to enforce payment. [Keppel Cebu
Shipyard, Inc. v. Pioneer Ins. and Surety Corp., GR 180880-81 & 180896-97, Sept. 25, 2009, 601 SCRA 96,
141-142].
Doctrine of the real and hypothecary nature of maritime law. Mar. Ins.
[The rule that] a ship owners liability is merely co-extensive with his interest in the vessel, except where
actual fault is attributable to the shipowner. [Aboitiz Shipping Corp. v. CA, GR 121833, Oct. 17, 2008].
Doctrine of vagueness.
An aspect of the due process requirement of notice, [which] holds that a law is facially invalid if persons of
common intelligence must necessarily guess as at its meaning and differ as to its application.
Doctrine of waiver.
A doctrine resting upon an equitable principle which courts of law will recognize, that a person, with full
knowledge of the facts shall not be permitted to act in a manner inconsistent with his former position or
conduct to the injury of another, a rule of judicial policy, the legal outgrowth of judicial abhorrence so to
speak, of a persons taking inconsistent positions and gaining advantages thereby through the aid of courts.
[Lopez v. Ochoa, GR L-7955, May 30, 1958].
WELCOME to Philippine_Laws.
Ignorantia legis neminem excusat.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2010
Political Law Doctrines
Archipelagic Doctrine Integration of a group of islands to the sea and their oneness so that together they
can constitute one unit, one country, and one state. An imaginary single baseline is drawn around the islands
by joining appropriate points of the outermost islands of the archipelago with straight lines and all islands and
waters enclosed within the baseline form part of the territory. The main purpose is to protect the territorial
interests of an archipelago. (Art 1.)
Doctrine of Parens Patriae government as guardian of the rights of the people. (Governemntof Philippine
Islands v. El Monte Piedad)
Plain View Doctrine the objects within the sight of an officer who has a right to be in a position to have
that view are subject to seizure and may be presented as evidence (open to the eye and hand).
Doctrine of Indelible Allegiance an individual may be compelled to retain his original nationality
notwithstanding that he has already renounced or forfeited it under the laws of the second state whose
nationality he has acquired.
Doctrine of Judicial Supremacy Although holding neither purse nor sword and so regarded as the
weakest of the three departments of the government, the judiciary is nonetheless vested with the power to
annul the acts of either the Legislative or the Executive department or both when not conformable to the
fundamental law.
Regalian Doctrine ( Jura Regalia) All lands of the public domain, waters, minerals, coal, petroleum and
other minerals oils, all forces of potential energy, fisheries, forests, or timber, wildlife, flora, and fauna and
natural resources belong to the State. With the exception of agricultural lands, all other natural resources shall
not be alienated. (Sec. 2 Art XII)
Stewardship Doctrine Private property is supposed to be held by the individual only as a trustee for the
people in general, who are its real owners.
Doctrine of Shifting Majority For each House of Congress to pass a bill, only the votes of the majority of
those present in the session, there being a quorum, is required.
Doctrine of Qualified Political Agency or Alter Ego Principle Acts of the Secretaries of Executive
departments when performed and promulgated in the regular course of business or unless disapproved or
presumptively the acts of the Chief Executive (Villena v. Secretary of the Interior)
Doctrine of Proper Submission- plebiscite may be held on the same day as regular election provided the
people are sufficiently informed of the amendments to be voted upon, to conscientiously deliberate thereon, to
express their will in a genuine manner. Submission of piece-meal amendments is constitutional. All the
amendments must be submitted for ratification at one plebiscite only. The people have to be given a proper
frame of reference in arriving at their decision. They have no idea yet of what the rest of the amended
constitution would be. (Tolentino v. Comelec)
However, the grant of relief in a habeas corpus proceeding is not predicated on the disappearance of a
person, but on his illegal detention. Habeas corpus generally applies to all cases of illegal confinement or
detention by which any person is deprived of his liberty or by which the rightful custody of any person is
withheld from the person entitled thereto.
The ultimate purpose of the writ of habeas corpus is to relieve a person from unlawful restraint. It is devised
as a speedy relief from unlawful restraint. It is a remedy intended to determine whether the person under
detention is held under lawful authority.
The purpose of the writ is to determine whether a person is being illegally deprived of his liberty. If the inquiry
reveals that the detention is illegal, the court orders the release of the person. If, however, the detention is
proven lawful, then the habeas corpus proceedings terminate. The use of habeas corpus is thus very limited.
When forcible taking and disappearance -- not arrest and detention -- have been alleged, the proper remedy is
not habeas corpus proceedings, but criminal investigation and proceedings.
Reference: Martinez vs Mendoza, G.R. No. 153795 (August 17, 2006)
The Supreme Court may review, in an appropriate proceeding filed by any citizen, the sufficiency of the factual
basis of the proclamation of martial law or the suspension of the privilege of the writ or the extension thereof,
and must promulgate its decision thereon within thirty days from its filing.
A state of martial law does not suspend the operation of the Constitution, nor supplant the functioning of the
civil courts or the legislative assemblies, nor authorize the conferment of jurisdiction on military courts and
agencies over civilians where civil courts are able to function, nor automatically suspend the privilege of the
writ.
The suspension of the privilege of the writ shall apply only to persons judicially charged for rebellion or
offenses inherent in or directly connected with the invasion.
During the suspension of the privilege of the writ, any person thus arrested or detained shall be judicially
charged within three days, otherwise he shall be released.
Under Section 5, Rule 113 of the Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure, the three instances when warrantless
arrests may be lawfully effected are:
o an arrest of a suspect in flagrante delicto (in the very act of);
o an arrest of a suspect where, based on personal knowledge of the arresting officer, there is
probable cause that said suspect was the perpetrator of a crime which had just been
committed; and
o an arrest of a prisoner who has escaped from custody serving final judgment or temporarily
confined during the pendency of his case or has escaped while being transferred from one
confinement to another.
Facts
"Acting on an appeal filed by the Republic, the CA ruled that since the (Republic) former had actively
participated in the proceedings before the lower court, but failed to raise the jurisdictional challenge therein,
petitioner is thereby estopped from questioning the jurisdiction of the lower court on appeal."
SC Ruling
The Republic is not estopped from raising the issue of jurisdiction in this case.
At the outset, we rule that petitioner Republic is not estopped from questioning the jurisdiction of the lower
court, even if the former raised the jurisdictional question only on appeal. The rule is settled that lack of
jurisdiction over the subject matter may be raised at any stage of the proceedings.[18] Jurisdiction over the
subject matter is conferred only by the Constitution or the law.[19] It cannot be acquired through a waiver or
enlarged by the omission of the parties or conferred by the acquiescence of the court.[20] Consequently,
questions of jurisdiction may be cognizable even if raised for the first time on appeal.[21]
The ruling of the Court of Appeals that a party may be estopped from raising such [jurisdictional] question if
he has actively taken part in the very proceeding which he questions, belatedly objecting to the courts
jurisdiction in the event that the judgment or order subsequently rendered is adverse to him[22] is based on
the doctrine of estoppel by laches. We are aware of that doctrine first enunciated by this Court in Tijam v.
Sibonghanoy.[23] In Tijam, the party-litigant actively participated in the proceedings before the lower court
and filed pleadings therein. Only 15 years thereafter, and after receiving an adverse Decision on the merits
from the appellate court, did the party-litigant question the lower courts jurisdiction. Considering the unique
facts in that case, we held that estoppel by laches had already precluded the party-litigant from raising the
question of lack of jurisdiction on appeal. In Figueroa v. People,[24] we cautioned that Tijam must be
construed as an exception to the general rule and applied only in the most exceptional cases whose factual
milieu is similar to that in the latter case.
The facts are starkly different in this case, making the exceptional rule in Tijam inapplicable. Here, petitioner
Republic filed its Opposition to the application for registration when the records were still with the RTC.[25] At
that point, petitioner could not have questioned the delegated jurisdiction of the MTC, simply because the case
was not yet with that court. When the records were transferred to the MTC, petitioner neither filed pleadings
nor requested affirmative relief from that court. On appeal, petitioner immediately raised the jurisdictional
question in its Brief.[26] Clearly, the exceptional doctrine of estoppel by laches is inapplicable to the instant
appeal.
Laches has been defined as the failure or neglect, for an unreasonable and unexplained length of time, to do
that which, by exercising due diligence, could or should have been done earlier; it is negligence or omission to
assert a right within a reasonable time, warranting the presumption that the party entitled to assert it either
has abandoned or declined to assert it.[27] In this case, petitioner Republic has not displayed such
unreasonable failure or neglect that would lead us to conclude that it has abandoned or declined to assert its
right to question the lower court's jurisdiction.
An ancient document is one that is (1) more than 30 years old, (2) found in the proper custody, and (3)
unblemished by any alteration or by any circumstance of suspicion.[11] It must on its face appear to be
genuine.
Not all notarized documents are exempted from the rule on authentication. Thus, an affidavit does not
automatically become a public document just because it contains a notarial jurat. Furthermore, the affidavit in
question does not state how the ownership of the subject land was transferred from Sinforoso Mendoza to
Margarito Mendoza. By itself, an affidavit is not a mode of acquiring ownership."
Cequena and Lirio vs Bolante, GR 137944 (April 6, 2000)
SEC. 23. Disqualification by reason of death or insanity of adverse party. Parties or assignors of parties to a
case, or persons in whose behalf a case is prosecuted, against an executor or administrator or other
representative of a deceased person, or against a person of unsound mind, upon a claim or demand against
the estate of such deceased person, or against such person of unsound mind, cannot testify as to any matter
of fact occurring before the death of such deceased person or before such person became of unsound mind.
The "Dead Man's Statute" provides that if one party to the alleged transaction is precluded from testifying by
death, insanity, or other mental disabilities, the surviving party is not entitled to the undue advantage of giving
his own uncontradicted and unexplained account of the transaction.9 But before this rule can be successfully
invoked to bar the introduction of testimonial evidence, it is necessary that:
1. The witness is a party or assignor of a party to case or persons in whose behalf a case in prosecuted.
2. The action is against an executor or administrator or other representative of a deceased person or a person
of unsound mind;
3. The subject-matter of the action is a claim or demand against the estate of such deceased person or
against person of unsound mind;
4. His testimony refers to any matter of fact of which occurred before the death of such deceased person or
before such person became of unsound mind."10
Sunga-Chan and Sunga vs Chua, G.R. No. 143340 (August 15, 2001)
The doctrine of lex contractus or lex loci contractus means the law of the place where a contract is executed
or to be performed. It controls the nature, construction, and validity of the contract and it may pertain to the
law voluntarily agreed upon by the parties or the law intended by them either expressly or implicitly.
Reference: GR 149177
Corollary to the doctrine of exhaustion of administrative remedies is the doctrine of primary jurisdiction; that
is, courts cannot or will not determine a controversy involving a question which is within the jurisdiction of the
administrative tribunal prior to the resolution of that question by the administrative tribunal, where the
question demands the exercise of sound administrative discretion requiring the special knowledge, experience
and services of the administrative tribunal to determine technical and intricate matters of fact."
source: Republic v. Lacap, G.R. No. 158253, March 2, 2007, 517 SCRA 255
Corollary to the doctrine of exhaustion of administrative remedies is the doctrine of primary jurisdiction; that
is, courts cannot or will not determine a controversy involving a question which is within the jurisdiction of the
administrative tribunal prior to the resolution of that question by the administrative tribunal, where the
question demands the exercise of sound administrative discretion requiring the special knowledge, experience
and services of the administrative tribunal to determine technical and intricate matters of fact."
source: Republic v. Lacap, G.R. No. 158253, March 2, 2007, 517 SCRA 255
The doctrine of exhaustion of administrative remedies is a cornerstone of our judicial system. The thrust of the
rule is that courts must allow administrative agencies to carry out their functions and discharge their
responsibilities within the specialized areas of their respective competence. It has been held, however, that the
doctrine of exhaustion of administrative remedies and the doctrine of primary jurisdiction are not ironclad
rules.
In the case of Republic of the Philippines v. Lacap, the Court enumerated the numerous exceptions to these
rules, namely:
(a) where there is estoppel on the part of the party invoking the doctrine;
(b) where the challenged administrative act is patently illegal, amounting to lack of jurisdiction;
(c) where there is unreasonable delay or official inaction that will irretrievably prejudice the
complainant;
(d) where the amount involved is relatively so small as to make the rule impractical and oppressive;
(e) where the question involved is purely legal and will ultimately have to be decided by the courts of
justice;
(f) where judicial intervention is urgent;
(g) where the application of the doctrine may cause great and irreparable damage;
(h) where the controverted acts violate due process;
(i) where the issue of non-exhaustion of administrative remedies has been rendered moot;
(j) where there is no other plain, speedy and adequate remedy;
(k) where strong public interest is involved; and
(l) in quo warranto proceedings.