G.R. No. 119976 September 18, 1995
IMELDA ROMUALDEZ-MARCOS, petitioner,
vs.
COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS and CIRILO ROY MONTEJO, respondents.
KAPUNAN, J.:
A constitutional provision should be construed as to give it effective operation and suppress the mischief at which it is aimed. 1
The 1987 Constitution mandates that an aspirant for election to the
House of Representatives be "a registered voter in the district in which
he shall be elected, and a resident thereof for a period of not less
than one year immediately preceding the election." 2
The mischief which this provision — reproduced verbatim from the 1973
Constitution — seeks to prevent is the possibility of a "stranger or
newcomer unacquainted with the conditions and needs of a community and
not identified with the latter, from an elective office to serve that
community." 3
Petitioner
Imelda Romualdez-Marcos filed her Certificate of Candidacy for the
position of Representative of the First District of Leyte with the
Provincial Election Supervisor on March 8, 1995, providing the following
information in item no. 8: 4
RESIDENCE IN THE CONSTITUENCY WHERE I SEEK TO BE ELECTED IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING THE ELECTION: __________ Years and seven Months.
On March 23, 1995,
private respondent Cirilo Roy Montejo, the incumbent Representative of
the First District of Leyte and a candidate for the same position, filed
a "Petition for Cancellation and Disqualification" 5
with the Commission on Elections alleging that petitioner did not meet
the constitutional requirement for residency. In his petition, private
respondent contended that Mrs. Marcos lacked the Constitution's one year
residency requirement for candidates for the House of Representatives
on the evidence of declarations made by her in Voter Registration Record
94-No. 3349772 6
and in her Certificate of Candidacy. He prayed that "an order be issued
declaring (petitioner) disqualified and canceling the certificate of
candidacy." 7
On
March 29, 1995, petitioner filed an Amended/Corrected Certificate of
Candidacy, changing the entry "seven" months to "since childhood" in
item no. 8 of the amended certificate. 8 On the same day, the Provincial Election Supervisor of Leyte informed petitioner that:
[T]his office cannot receive or accept the
aforementioned Certificate of Candidacy on the ground that it is filed
out of time, the deadline for the filing of the same having already
lapsed on March 20, 1995. The Corrected/Amended Certificate of Candidacy
should have been filed on or before the March 20, 1995 deadline. 9
Consequently,
petitioner filed the Amended/Corrected Certificate of Candidacy with
the COMELEC's Head Office in Intramuros, Manila on
March 31, 1995. Her Answer to private respondent's petition in SPA No. 95-009 was likewise filed with the head office on the same day. In said Answer, petitioner averred that the entry of the word "seven" in her original Certificate of Candidacy was the result of an "honest misinterpretation" 10 which she sought to rectify by adding the words "since childhood" in her Amended/Corrected Certificate of Candidacy and that "she has always maintained Tacloban City as her domicile or residence. 11 Impugning respondent's motive in filing the petition seeking her disqualification, she noted that:
March 31, 1995. Her Answer to private respondent's petition in SPA No. 95-009 was likewise filed with the head office on the same day. In said Answer, petitioner averred that the entry of the word "seven" in her original Certificate of Candidacy was the result of an "honest misinterpretation" 10 which she sought to rectify by adding the words "since childhood" in her Amended/Corrected Certificate of Candidacy and that "she has always maintained Tacloban City as her domicile or residence. 11 Impugning respondent's motive in filing the petition seeking her disqualification, she noted that:
When respondent (petitioner herein) announced that
she was intending to register as a voter in Tacloban City and run for
Congress in the First District of Leyte, petitioner immediately opposed
her intended registration by writing a letter stating that "she is not a
resident of said city but of Barangay Olot, Tolosa, Leyte. After
respondent had registered as a voter in Tolosa following completion of
her six month actual residence therein, petitioner filed a petition with
the COMELEC to transfer the town of Tolosa from the First District to
the Second District and pursued such a move up to the Supreme Court, his
purpose being to remove respondent as petitioner's opponent in the
congressional election in the First District. He also filed a bill,
along with other Leyte Congressmen, seeking the creation of another
legislative district to remove the town of Tolosa out of the First
District, to achieve his purpose. However, such bill did not pass the
Senate. Having failed on such moves, petitioner now filed the instant
petition for the same objective, as it is obvious that he is afraid to
submit along with respondent for the judgment and verdict of the
electorate of the First District of Leyte in an honest, orderly,
peaceful, free and clean elections on May 8, 1995. 12
On April 24, 1995, the Second Division of the Commission on Elections (COMELEC), by a vote of 2 to 1, 13
came up with a Resolution 1) finding private respondent's Petition for
Disqualification in SPA 95-009 meritorious; 2) striking off petitioner's
Corrected/Amended Certificate of Candidacy of March 31, 1995; and 3)
canceling her original Certificate of Candidacy. 14
Dealing with two primary issues, namely, the validity of amending the
original Certificate of Candidacy after the lapse of the deadline for
filing certificates of candidacy, and petitioner's compliance with the
one year residency requirement, the Second Division held:
Respondent raised the affirmative defense in her
Answer that the printed word "Seven" (months) was a result of an "honest
misinterpretation or honest mistake" on her part and, therefore, an
amendment should subsequently be allowed. She averred that she thought
that what was asked was her "actual and physical" presence in Tolosa and
not residence of origin or domicile in the First Legislative District,
to which she could have responded "since childhood." In an accompanying
affidavit, she stated that her domicile is Tacloban City, a component of
the First District, to which she always intended to return whenever
absent and which she has never abandoned. Furthermore, in her
memorandum, she tried to discredit petitioner's theory of
disqualification by alleging that she has been a resident of the First
Legislative District of Leyte since childhood, although she only became a
resident of the Municipality of Tolosa for seven months. She asserts
that she has always been a resident of Tacloban City, a component of the
First District, before coming to the Municipality of Tolosa.
Along this point, it is interesting to note that
prior to her registration in Tolosa, respondent announced that she would
be registering in Tacloban City so that she can be a candidate for the
District. However, this intention was rebuffed when petitioner wrote the
Election Officer of Tacloban not to allow respondent since she is a
resident of Tolosa and not Tacloban. She never disputed this claim and
instead implicitly acceded to it by registering in Tolosa.
This incident belies respondent's claim of "honest
misinterpretation or honest mistake." Besides, the Certificate of
Candidacy only asks for RESIDENCE. Since on the basis of her Answer, she
was quite aware of "residence of origin" which she interprets to be
Tacloban City, it is curious why she did not cite Tacloban City in her
Certificate of Candidacy. Her explanation that she thought what was
asked was her actual and physical presence in Tolosa is not easy to
believe because there is none in the question that insinuates about
Tolosa. In fact, item no. 8 in the Certificate of Candidacy speaks
clearly of "Residency in the CONSTITUENCY where I seek to be elected immediately preceding the election." Thus, the explanation of respondent fails to be persuasive.
From the foregoing, respondent's defense of an honest mistake or misinterpretation, therefore, is devoid of merit.
To further buttress respondent's contention that an amendment may be made, she cited the case of Alialy v. COMELEC (2
SCRA 957). The reliance of respondent on the case of Alialy is
misplaced. The case only applies to the "inconsequential deviations
which cannot affect the result of the election, or deviations from
provisions intended primarily to secure timely and orderly conduct of
elections." The Supreme Court in that case considered the amendment only
as a matter of form. But in the instant case, the amendment cannot be
considered as a matter of form or an inconsequential deviation. The
change in the number of years of residence in the place where respondent
seeks to be elected is a substantial matter which determines her
qualification as a candidacy, specially those intended to suppress,
accurate material representation in the original certificate which
adversely affects the filer. To admit the amended certificate is to
condone the evils brought by the shifting minds of manipulating
candidate, of the detriment of the integrity of the election.
Moreover, to allow respondent to change the seven (7)
month period of her residency in order to prolong it by claiming it was
"since childhood" is to allow an untruthfulness to be committed before
this Commission. The arithmetical accuracy of the 7 months residency the
respondent indicated in her certificate of candidacy can be gleaned
from her entry in her Voter's Registration Record accomplished on
January 28, 1995 which reflects that she is a resident of Brgy. Olot,
Tolosa, Leyte for 6 months at the time of the said registration (Annex
A, Petition). Said accuracy is further buttressed by her letter to the
election officer of San Juan, Metro Manila, dated August 24, 1994,
requesting for the cancellation of her registration in the Permanent
List of Voters thereat so that she can be re-registered or transferred
to Brgy. Olot, Tolosa, Leyte. The dates of these three (3) different
documents show the respondent's consistent conviction that she has
transferred her residence to Olot, Tolosa, Leyte from Metro Manila only
for such limited period of time, starting in the last week of August
1994 which on March 8, 1995 will only sum up to 7 months. The
Commission, therefore, cannot be persuaded to believe in the
respondent's contention that it was an error.
xxx xxx xxx
Based on these reasons the Amended/Corrected Certificate of Candidacy cannot be admitted by this Commission.
xxx xxx xxx
Anent the second issue, and based on the foregoing
discussion, it is clear that respondent has not complied with the one
year residency requirement of the Constitution.
In election cases, the term "residence" has always
been considered as synonymous with "domicile" which imports not only the
intention to reside in a fixed place but also personal presence in-that
place, coupled with conduct indicative of such intention. Domicile
denotes a fixed permanent residence to which when absent for business or
pleasure, or for like reasons, one intends to return. (Perfecto Faypon
vs. Eliseo Quirino, 96 Phil 294; Romualdez vs. RTC-Tacloban, 226 SCRA
408). In respondent's case, when she returned to the Philippines in
1991, the residence she chose was not Tacloban but San Juan, Metro
Manila. Thus, her animus revertendi is pointed to Metro Manila and not Tacloban.
This Division is aware that her claim that she has
been a resident of the First District since childhood is nothing more
than to give her a color of qualification where she is otherwise
constitutionally disqualified. It cannot hold ground in the face of the
facts admitted by the respondent in her affidavit. Except for the time
that she studied and worked for some years after graduation in Tacloban
City, she continuously lived in Manila. In 1959, after her husband was
elected Senator, she lived and resided in San Juan, Metro Manila where
she was a registered voter. In 1965, she lived in San Miguel, Manila
where she was again a registered voter. In 1978, she served as member of
the Batasang Pambansa as the representative of the City of Manila and
later on served as the Governor of Metro Manila. She could not have
served these positions if she had not been a resident of the City of
Manila. Furthermore, when she filed her certificate of candidacy for the
office of the President in 1992, she claimed to be a resident of San
Juan, Metro Manila. As a matter of fact on August 24, 1994, respondent
wrote a letter with the election officer of San Juan, Metro Manila
requesting for the cancellation of her registration in the permanent
list of voters that she may be re-registered or transferred to Barangay
Olot, Tolosa, Leyte. These facts manifest that she could not have been a
resident of Tacloban City since childhood up to the time she filed her
certificate of candidacy because she became a resident of many places,
including Metro Manila. This debunks her claim that prior to her
residence in Tolosa, Leyte, she was a resident of the First Legislative
District of Leyte since childhood.
In this case, respondent's conduct reveals her lack
of intention to make Tacloban her domicile. She registered as a voter in
different places and on several occasions declared that she was a
resident of Manila. Although she spent her school days in Tacloban, she
is considered to have abandoned such place when she chose to stay and
reside in other different places. In the case of Romualdez vs. RTC (226
SCRA 408) the Court explained how one acquires a new domicile by
choice. There must concur: (1) residence or bodily presence in the new
locality; (2) intention to remain there; and (3) intention to abandon
the old domicile. In other words there must basically be animus manendi with animus non revertendi.
When respondent chose to stay in Ilocos and later on in Manila, coupled
with her intention to stay there by registering as a voter there and
expressly declaring that she is a resident of that place, she is deemed
to have abandoned Tacloban City, where she spent her childhood and
school days, as her place of domicile.
Pure intention to reside in that place is not
sufficient, there must likewise be conduct indicative of such intention.
Respondent's statements to the effect that she has always intended to
return to Tacloban, without the accompanying conduct to prove that
intention, is not conclusive of her choice of residence. Respondent has
not presented any evidence to show that her conduct, one year prior the
election, showed intention to reside in Tacloban. Worse, what was
evident was that prior to her residence in Tolosa, she had been a
resident of Manila.
It is evident from these circumstances that she was not a resident of the First District of Leyte "since childhood."
To further support the assertion that she could have
not been a resident of the First District of Leyte for more than one
year, petitioner correctly pointed out that on January 28, 1995
respondent registered as a voter at precinct No. 18-A of Olot, Tolosa,
Leyte. In doing so, she placed in her Voter Registration Record that she
resided in the municipality of Tolosa for a period of six months. This
may be inconsequential as argued by the respondent since it refers only
to her residence in Tolosa, Leyte. But her failure to prove that she was
a resident of the First District of Leyte prior to her residence in
Tolosa leaves nothing but a convincing proof that she had been a
resident of the district for six months only. 15
In a Resolution promulgated a day before the May 8, 1995 elections, the COMELEC en banc denied petitioner's Motion for Reconsideration 16
of the April 24, 1995 Resolution declaring her not qualified to run for
the position of Member of the House of Representatives for the First
Legislative District of Leyte. 17 The Resolution tersely stated:
After deliberating on the Motion for Reconsideration,
the Commission RESOLVED to DENY it, no new substantial matters having
been raised therein to warrant re-examination of the resolution granting
the petition for disqualification. 18
On
May 11, 1995, the COMELEC issued a Resolution allowing petitioner's
proclamation should the results of the canvass show that she obtained
the highest number of votes in the congressional elections in the First
District of Leyte. On the same day, however, the COMELEC reversed itself
and issued a second Resolution directing that the proclamation of
petitioner be suspended in the event that she obtains the highest number
of votes. 19
In
a Supplemental Petition dated 25 May 1995, petitioner averred that she
was the overwhelming winner of the elections for the congressional seat
in the First District of Leyte held May 8, 1995 based on the canvass
completed by the Provincial Board of Canvassers on May 14, 1995.
Petitioner alleged that the canvass showed that she obtained a total of
70,471 votes compared to the 36,833 votes received by Respondent
Montejo. A copy of said Certificate of Canvass was annexed to the
Supplemental Petition.
On account of the Resolutions disqualifying
petitioner from running for the congressional seat of the First District
of Leyte and the public respondent's Resolution suspending her
proclamation, petitioner comes to this court for relief.
Petitioner raises several issues in her Original and
Supplemental Petitions. The principal issues may be classified into two
general areas:
I. The issue of Petitioner's qualifications
Whether or not petitioner was a resident, for
election purposes, of the First District of Leyte for a period of one
year at the time of the May 9, 1995 elections.
II. The Jurisdictional Issue
a) Prior to the elections
Whether or not the COMELEC properly exercised its
jurisdiction in disqualifying petitioner outside the period mandated by
the Omnibus Election Code for disqualification cases under Article 78 of
the said Code.
b) After the Elections
Whether or not the House of Representatives Electoral
Tribunal assumed exclusive jurisdiction over the question of
petitioner's qualifications after the May 8, 1995 elections.
I. Petitioner's qualification
A perusal of the Resolution of the COMELEC's
Second Division reveals a startling confusion in the application of
settled concepts of "Domicile" and "Residence" in election law. While
the COMELEC seems to be in agreement with the general proposition that
for the purposes of election law, residence is synonymous with domicile,
the Resolution reveals a tendency to substitute or mistake the concept
of domicile for actual residence, a conception not intended for the
purpose of determining a candidate's qualifications for election to the
House of Representatives as required by the 1987 Constitution. As it
were, residence, for the purpose of meeting the qualification for an
elective position, has a settled meaning in our jurisdiction.
Article 50 of the Civil Code decrees that "[f]or the
exercise of civil rights and the fulfillment of civil obligations, the
domicile of natural persons is their place of habitual residence." In Ong vs. Republic 20
this court took the concept of domicile to mean an individual's
"permanent home", "a place to which, whenever absent for business or for
pleasure, one intends to return, and depends on facts and circumstances
in the sense that they disclose intent." 21
Based on the foregoing, domicile includes the twin elements of "the
fact of residing or physical presence in a fixed place" and animus manendi, or the intention of returning there permanently.
Residence, in its ordinary conception, implies the
factual relationship of an individual to a certain place. It is the
physical presence of a person in a given area, community or country. The
essential distinction between residence and domicile in law is that
residence involves the intent to leave when the purpose for which the
resident has taken up his abode ends. One may seek a place for purposes
such as pleasure, business, or health. If a person's intent be to
remain, it becomes his domicile; if his intent is to leave as soon as
his purpose is established it is residence. 22
It is thus, quite perfectly normal for an individual to have different
residences in various places. However, a person can only have a single
domicile, unless, for various reasons, he successfully abandons his
domicile in favor of another domicile of choice. In Uytengsu vs. Republic, 23 we laid this distinction quite clearly:
There is a difference between domicile and residence.
"Residence" is used to indicate a place of abode, whether permanent or
temporary; "domicile" denotes a fixed permanent residence to which, when
absent, one has the intention of returning. A man may have a residence
in one place and a domicile in another. Residence is not domicile, but
domicile is residence coupled with the intention to remain for an
unlimited time. A man can have but one domicile for the same purpose at
any time, but he may have numerous places of residence. His place of
residence is generally his place of domicile, but it is not by any means
necessarily so since no length of residence without intention of
remaining will constitute domicile.
For political
purposes the concepts of residence and domicile are dictated by the
peculiar criteria of political laws. As these concepts have evolved in
our election law, what has clearly and unequivocally emerged is the fact
that residence for election purposes is used synonymously with
domicile.
In Nuval vs. Guray, 24
the Court held that "the term residence. . . is synonymous with
domicile which imports not only intention to reside in a fixed place,
but also personal presence in that place, coupled with conduct
indicative of such intention." 25 Larena vs. Teves 26
reiterated the same doctrine in a case involving the qualifications of
the respondent therein to the post of Municipal President of Dumaguete,
Negros Oriental. Faypon vs. Quirino, 27
held that the absence from residence to pursue studies or practice a
profession or registration as a voter other than in the place where one
is elected does not constitute loss of residence. 28
So settled is the concept (of domicile) in our election law that in
these and other election law cases, this Court has stated that the mere
absence of an individual from his permanent residence without the
intention to abandon it does not result in a loss or change of domicile.
The deliberations of the 1987 Constitution on the
residence qualification for certain elective positions have placed
beyond doubt the principle that when the Constitution speaks of
"residence" in election law, it actually means only "domicile" to wit:
Mr. Nolledo: With respect to Section 5, I remember
that in the 1971 Constitutional Convention, there was an attempt to
require residence in the place not less than one year immediately
preceding the day of the elections. So my question is: What is the
Committee's concept of residence of a candidate for the legislature? Is
it actual residence or is it the concept of domicile or constructive
residence?
Mr. Davide: Madame President, insofar as the regular
members of the National Assembly are concerned, the proposed section
merely provides, among others, "and a resident thereof", that is, in the
district for a period of not less than one year preceding the day of
the election. This was in effect lifted from the 1973 Constitution, the
interpretation given to it was domicile. 29
xxx xxx xxx
Mrs. Rosario Braid: The next question is on Section
7, page 2. I think Commissioner Nolledo has raised the same point that
"resident" has been interpreted at times as a matter of intention rather
than actual residence.
Mr. De los Reyes: Domicile.
Ms. Rosario Braid: Yes, So, would the gentleman
consider at the proper time to go back to actual residence rather than
mere intention to reside?
Mr. De los Reyes: But we might encounter some
difficulty especially considering that a provision in the Constitution
in the Article on Suffrage says that Filipinos living abroad may vote as
enacted by law. So, we have to stick to the original concept that it
should be by domicile and not physical residence. 30
In Co vs. Electoral Tribunal of the House of Representatives, 31
this Court concluded that the framers of the 1987 Constitution
obviously adhered to the definition given to the term residence in
election law, regarding it as having the same meaning as domicile. 32
In
the light of the principles just discussed, has petitioner Imelda
Romualdez Marcos satisfied the residency requirement mandated by Article
VI, Sec. 6 of the 1987 Constitution? Of what significance is the
questioned entry in petitioner's Certificate of Candidacy stating her
residence in the First Legislative District of Leyte as seven (7)
months?
It is the fact of residence, not a statement in a
certificate of candidacy which ought to be decisive in determining
whether or not and individual has satisfied the constitution's residency
qualification requirement. The said statement becomes material only
when there is or appears to be a deliberate attempt to mislead,
misinform, or hide a fact which would otherwise render a candidate
ineligible. It would be plainly ridiculous for a candidate to
deliberately and knowingly make a statement in a certificate of
candidacy which would lead to his or her disqualification.
It stands to reason therefore, that petitioner merely
committed an honest mistake in jotting the word "seven" in the space
provided for the residency qualification requirement. The circumstances
leading to her filing the questioned entry obviously resulted in the
subsequent confusion which prompted petitioner to write down the period
of her actual stay in Tolosa, Leyte instead of her period of residence
in the First district, which was "since childhood" in the space
provided. These circumstances and events are amply detailed in the
COMELEC's Second Division's questioned resolution, albeit with a
different interpretation. For instance, when herein petitioner announced
that she would be registering in Tacloban City to make her eligible to
run in the First District, private respondent Montejo opposed the same,
claiming that petitioner was a resident of Tolosa, not Tacloban City.
Petitioner then registered in her place of actual residence in the First
District, which is Tolosa, Leyte, a fact which she subsequently noted
down in her Certificate of Candidacy. A close look at said certificate
would reveal the possible source of the confusion: the entry for
residence (Item No. 7) is followed immediately by the entry for
residence in the constituency where a candidate seeks election thus:
7. RESIDENCE (complete Address): Brgy. Olot, Tolosa, Leyte
POST OFFICE ADDRESS FOR ELECTION PURPOSES: Brgy. Olot, Tolosa, Leyte
8. RESIDENCE IN THE CONSTITUENCY WHERE I SEEK TO
BE ELECTED IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING THE ELECTION:_________ Years and Seven Months.
BE ELECTED IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING THE ELECTION:_________ Years and Seven Months.
Having been forced
by private respondent to register in her place of actual residence in
Leyte instead of petitioner's claimed domicile, it appears that
petitioner had jotted down her period of stay in her legal residence or
domicile. The juxtaposition of entries in Item 7 and Item 8 — the first
requiring actual residence and the second requiring domicile — coupled
with the circumstances surrounding petitioner's registration as a voter
in Tolosa obviously led to her writing down an unintended entry for
which she could be disqualified. This honest mistake should not,
however, be allowed to negate the fact of residence in the First
District if such fact were established by means more convincing than a
mere entry on a piece of paper.
We now proceed to the matter of petitioner's domicile.
In support of its asseveration that petitioner's
domicile could not possibly be in the First District of Leyte, the
Second Division of the COMELEC, in its assailed Resolution of April
24,1995 maintains that "except for the time when (petitioner) studied
and worked for some years after graduation in Tacloban City, she
continuously lived in Manila." The Resolution additionally cites certain
facts as indicative of the fact that petitioner's domicile ought to be
any place where she lived in the last few decades except Tacloban,
Leyte. First, according to the Resolution, petitioner, in 1959, resided
in San Juan, Metro Manila where she was also registered voter. Then, in
1965, following the election of her husband to the Philippine
presidency, she lived in San Miguel, Manila where she as a voter. In
1978 and thereafter, she served as a member of the Batasang Pambansa and
Governor of Metro Manila. "She could not, have served these positions
if she had not been a resident of Metro Manila," the COMELEC stressed.
Here is where the confusion lies.
We have stated, many times in the past, that an
individual does not lose his domicile even if he has lived and
maintained residences in different places. Residence, it bears
repeating, implies a factual relationship to a given place for various
purposes. The absence from legal residence or domicile to pursue a
profession, to study or to do other things of a temporary or
semi-permanent nature does not constitute loss of residence. Thus, the
assertion by the COMELEC that "she could not have been a resident of
Tacloban City since childhood up to the time she filed her certificate
of candidacy because she became a resident of many places" flies in the
face of settled jurisprudence in which this Court carefully made
distinctions between (actual) residence and domicile for election law
purposes. In Larena vs. Teves, 33 supra, we stressed:
[T]his court is of the opinion and so holds that a
person who has his own house wherein he lives with his family in a
municipality without having ever had the intention of abandoning it, and
without having lived either alone or with his family in another
municipality, has his residence in the former municipality,
notwithstanding his having registered as an elector in the other
municipality in question and having been a candidate for various insular
and provincial positions, stating every time that he is a resident of
the latter municipality.
More significantly, in Faypon vs. Quirino, 34 We explained that:
A citizen may leave the place of his birth to look
for "greener pastures," as the saying goes, to improve his lot, and
that, of course includes study in other places, practice of his
avocation, or engaging in business. When an election is to be held, the
citizen who left his birthplace to improve his lot may desire to return
to his native town to cast his ballot but for professional or business
reasons, or for any other reason, he may not absent himself from his
professional or business activities; so there he registers himself as
voter as he has the qualifications to be one and is not willing to give
up or lose the opportunity to choose the officials who are to run the
government especially in national elections. Despite such registration,
the animus revertendi to his home, to his domicile or residence
of origin has not forsaken him. This may be the explanation why the
registration of a voter in a place other than his residence of origin
has not been deemed sufficient to constitute abandonment or loss of such
residence. It finds justification in the natural desire and longing of
every person to return to his place of birth. This strong feeling of
attachment to the place of one's birth must be overcome by positive
proof of abandonment for another.
From the
foregoing, it can be concluded that in its above-cited statements
supporting its proposition that petitioner was ineligible to run for the
position of Representative of the First District of Leyte, the COMELEC
was obviously referring to petitioner's various places of (actual)
residence, not her domicile. In doing so, it not only ignored settled
jurisprudence on residence in election law and the deliberations of the
constitutional commission but also the provisions of the Omnibus
Election Code (B.P. 881). 35
What
is undeniable, however, are the following set of facts which establish
the fact of petitioner's domicile, which we lift verbatim from the
COMELEC's Second Division's assailed Resolution: 36
In or about 1938 when respondent was a little
over 8 years old, she established her domicile in Tacloban, Leyte
(Tacloban City). She studied in the Holy Infant Academy in Tacloban from
1938 to 1949 when she graduated from high school. She pursued her
college studies in St. Paul's College, now Divine Word University in
Tacloban, where she earned her degree in Education. Thereafter, she
taught in the Leyte Chinese School, still in Tacloban City. In 1952 she
went to Manila to work with her cousin, the late speaker Daniel Z.
Romualdez in his office in the House of Representatives. In 1954, she
married ex-President Ferdinand E. Marcos when he was still a congressman
of Ilocos Norte and registered there as a voter. When her husband was
elected Senator of the Republic in 1959, she and her husband lived
together in San Juan, Rizal where she registered as a voter. In 1965,
when her husband was elected President of the Republic of the
Philippines, she lived with him in Malacanang Palace and registered as a
voter in San Miguel, Manila.
[I]n February 1986 (she claimed that) she and her
family were abducted and kidnapped to Honolulu, Hawaii. In November
1991, she came home to Manila. In 1992, respondent ran for election as
President of the Philippines and filed her Certificate of Candidacy
wherein she indicated that she is a resident and registered voter of San
Juan, Metro Manila.
Applying the
principles discussed to the facts found by COMELEC, what is inescapable
is that petitioner held various residences for different purposes during
the last four decades. None of these purposes unequivocally point to an
intention to abandon her domicile of origin in Tacloban, Leyte.
Moreover, while petitioner was born in Manila, as a minor she naturally
followed the domicile of her parents. She grew up in Tacloban, reached
her adulthood there and eventually established residence in different
parts of the country for various reasons. Even during her husband's
presidency, at the height of the Marcos Regime's powers, petitioner kept
her close ties to her domicile of origin by establishing residences in
Tacloban, celebrating her birthdays and other important personal
milestones in her home province, instituting well-publicized projects
for the benefit of her province and hometown, and establishing a
political power base where her siblings and close relatives held
positions of power either through the ballot or by appointment, always
with either her influence or consent. These well-publicized ties to her
domicile of origin are part of the history and lore of the quarter
century of Marcos power in our country. Either they were entirely
ignored in the COMELEC'S Resolutions, or the majority of the COMELEC did
not know what the rest of the country always knew: the fact of
petitioner's domicile in Tacloban, Leyte.
Private respondent in his Comment, contends that
Tacloban was not petitioner's domicile of origin because she did not
live there until she was eight years old. He avers that after leaving
the place in 1952, she "abandoned her residency (sic) therein for
many years and . . . (could not) re-establish her domicile in said
place by merely expressing her intention to live there again." We do not
agree.
First, minor follows the domicile of his parents. As
domicile, once acquired is retained until a new one is gained, it
follows that in spite of the fact of petitioner's being born in Manila,
Tacloban, Leyte was her domicile of origin by operation of law. This
domicile was not established only when her father brought his family
back to Leyte contrary to private respondent's averments.
Second, domicile of origin is not easily lost. To successfully effect a change of domicile, one must demonstrate: 37
1. An actual removal or an actual change of domicile;
2. A bona fide intention of abandoning the former place of residence and establishing a new one; and
3. Acts which correspond with the purpose.
In the absence of
clear and positive proof based on these criteria, the residence of
origin should be deemed to continue. Only with evidence showing
concurrence of all three requirements can the presumption of continuity
or residence be rebutted, for a change of residence requires an actual
and deliberate abandonment, and one cannot have two legal residences at
the same time. 38
In the case at bench, the evidence adduced by private respondent
plainly lacks the degree of persuasiveness required to convince this
court that an abandonment of domicile of origin in favor of a domicile
of choice indeed occurred. To effect an abandonment requires the
voluntary act of relinquishing petitioner's former domicile with an intent to supplant the former domicile with one of her own choosing (domicilium voluntarium).
In this connection, it cannot be correctly argued
that petitioner lost her domicile of origin by operation of law as a
result of her marriage to the late President Ferdinand E. Marcos in
1952. For there is a clearly established distinction between the Civil
Code concepts of "domicile" and "residence." 39
The presumption that the wife automatically gains the husband's
domicile by operation of law upon marriage cannot be inferred from the
use of the term "residence" in Article 110 of the Civil Code because the
Civil Code is one area where the two concepts are well delineated. Dr.
Arturo Tolentino, writing on this specific area explains:
In the Civil Code, there is an obvious difference
between domicile and residence. Both terms imply relations between a
person and a place; but in residence, the relation is one of fact while
in domicile it is legal or juridical, independent of the necessity of
physical presence. 40
Article 110 of the Civil Code provides:
Art. 110. — The husband shall fix the residence of
the family. But the court may exempt the wife from living with the
husband if he should live abroad unless in the service of the Republic.
A survey of
jurisprudence relating to Article 110 or to the concepts of domicile or
residence as they affect the female spouse upon marriage yields nothing
which would suggest that the female spouse automatically loses her
domicile of origin in favor of the husband's choice of residence upon
marriage.
Article 110 is a virtual restatement of Article 58 of the Spanish Civil Code of 1889 which states:
La mujer esta obligada a seguir a su marido donde
quiera que fije su residencia. Los Tribunales, sin embargo, podran con
justa causa eximirla de esta obligacion cuando el marido transende su
residencia a ultramar o' a pais extranjero.
Note the use of the phrase "donde quiera su fije de residencia" in the aforequoted article, which means wherever (the husband) wishes to establish residence.
This part of the article clearly contemplates only actual residence
because it refers to a positive act of fixing a family home or
residence. Moreover, this interpretation is further strengthened by the
phrase "cuando el marido translade su residencia" in the same provision which means, "when the husband shall transfer his
residence," referring to another positive act of relocating the family
to another home or place of actual residence. The article obviously
cannot be understood to refer to domicile which is a fixed,
fairly-permanent concept when it plainly connotes the possibility of transferring from one place to another not only once, but as often as the husband may deem fit to move his family, a circumstance more consistent with the concept of actual residence.
fairly-permanent concept when it plainly connotes the possibility of transferring from one place to another not only once, but as often as the husband may deem fit to move his family, a circumstance more consistent with the concept of actual residence.
The right of the husband to fix the actual residence
is in harmony with the intention of the law to strengthen and unify the
family, recognizing the fact that the husband and the wife bring into
the marriage different domiciles (of origin). This difference could, for
the sake of family unity, be reconciled only by allowing the husband to
fix a single place of actual residence.
Very significantly, Article 110 of the Civil Code is
found under Title V under the heading: RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS BETWEEN
HUSBAND AND WIFE. Immediately preceding Article 110 is Article 109 which
obliges the husband and wife to live together, thus:
Art. 109. — The husband and wife are obligated to
live together, observe mutual respect and fidelity and render mutual
help and support.
The duty to live
together can only be fulfilled if the husband and wife are physically
together. This takes into account the situations where the couple has
many residences (as in the case of the petitioner). If the husband has
to stay in or transfer to any one of their residences, the wife should
necessarily be with him in order that they may "live together." Hence,
it is illogical to conclude that Art. 110 refers to "domicile" and not
to "residence." Otherwise, we shall be faced with a situation where the
wife is left in the domicile while the husband, for professional or
other reasons, stays in one of their (various) residences. As Dr.
Tolentino further explains:
Residence and Domicile — Whether the word "residence"
as used with reference to particular matters is synonymous with
"domicile" is a question of some difficulty, and the ultimate decision
must be made from a consideration of the purpose and intent with which
the word is used. Sometimes they are used synonymously, at other times
they are distinguished from one another.
xxx xxx xxx
Residence in the civil law is a material fact,
referring to the physical presence of a person in a place. A person can
have two or more residences, such as a country residence and a city
residence. Residence is acquired by living in place; on the other hand,
domicile can exist without actually living in the place. The important
thing for domicile is that, once residence has been established in one
place, there be an intention to stay there permanently, even if
residence is also established in some other
place. 41
place. 41
In
fact, even the matter of a common residence between the husband and the
wife during the marriage is not an iron-clad principle; In cases
applying the Civil Code on the question of a common matrimonial
residence, our jurisprudence has recognized certain situations 42
where the spouses could not be compelled to live with each other such
that the wife is either allowed to maintain a residence different from
that of her husband or, for obviously practical reasons, revert to her
original domicile (apart from being allowed to opt for a new one). In De la Vina vs. Villareal 43
this Court held that "[a] married woman may acquire a residence or
domicile separate from that of her husband during the existence of the
marriage where the husband has given cause for divorce." 44
Note that the Court allowed the wife either to obtain new residence or
to choose a new domicile in such an event. In instances where the wife
actually opts, .under the Civil Code, to live separately from her
husband either by taking new residence or reverting to her domicile of
origin, the Court has held that the wife could not be compelled to live
with her husband on pain of contempt. In Arroyo vs. Vasques de Arroyo 45 the Court held that:
Upon examination of the authorities, we are convinced
that it is not within the province of the courts of this country to
attempt to compel one of the spouses to cohabit with, and render
conjugal rights to, the other. Of course where the property rights of
one of the pair are invaded, an action for restitution of such rights
can be maintained. But we are disinclined to sanction the doctrine that
an order, enforcible (sic) by process of contempt, may be entered
to compel the restitution of the purely personal right of consortium.
At best such an order can be effective for no other purpose than to
compel the spouses to live under the same roof; and he experience of
those countries where the courts of justice have assumed to compel the
cohabitation of married people shows that the policy of the practice is
extremely questionable. Thus in England, formerly the Ecclesiastical
Court entertained suits for the restitution of conjugal rights at the
instance of either husband or wife; and if the facts were found to
warrant it, that court would make a mandatory decree, enforceable by
process of contempt in case of disobedience, requiring the delinquent
party to live with the other and render conjugal rights. Yet this
practice was sometimes criticized even by the judges who felt bound to
enforce such orders, and in Weldon v. Weldon (9 P.D. 52),
decided in 1883, Sir James Hannen, President in the Probate, Divorce and
Admiralty Division of the High Court of Justice, expressed his regret
that the English law on the subject was not the same as that which
prevailed in Scotland, where a decree of adherence, equivalent to the
decree for the restitution of conjugal rights in England, could be
obtained by the injured spouse, but could not be enforced by
imprisonment. Accordingly, in obedience to the growing sentiment against
the practice, the Matrimonial Causes Act (1884) abolished the remedy of
imprisonment; though a decree for the restitution of conjugal rights
can still be procured, and in case of disobedience may serve in
appropriate cases as the basis of an order for the periodical payment of
a stipend in the character of alimony.
In the voluminous jurisprudence of the United States,
only one court, so far as we can discover, has ever attempted to make a
preemptory order requiring one of the spouses to live with the other;
and that was in a case where a wife was ordered to follow and live with
her husband, who had changed his domicile to the City of New Orleans.
The decision referred to (Bahn v. Darby, 36 La. Ann., 70) was based on a
provision of the Civil Code of Louisiana similar to article 56 of the
Spanish Civil Code. It was decided many years ago, and the doctrine
evidently has not been fruitful even in the State of Louisiana. In other
states of the American Union the idea of enforcing cohabitation by
process of contempt is rejected. (21 Cyc., 1148).
In a decision of January 2, 1909, the Supreme Court
of Spain appears to have affirmed an order of the Audiencia Territorial
de Valladolid requiring a wife to return to the marital domicile, and in
the alternative, upon her failure to do so, to make a particular
disposition of certain money and effects then in her possession and to
deliver to her husband, as administrator of the ganancial property, all
income, rents, and interest which might accrue to her from the property
which she had brought to the marriage. (113 Jur. Civ., pp. 1, 11) But it
does not appear that this order for the return of the wife to the
marital domicile was sanctioned by any other penalty than the
consequences that would be visited upon her in respect to the use and
control of her property; and it does not appear that her disobedience to
that order would necessarily have been followed by imprisonment for
contempt.
Parenthetically
when Petitioner was married to then Congressman Marcos, in 1954,
petitioner was obliged — by virtue of Article 110 of the Civil Code — to
follow her husband's actual place of residence fixed by him. The
problem here is that at that time, Mr. Marcos had several places of
residence, among which were San Juan, Rizal and Batac, Ilocos Norte.
There is no showing which of these places Mr. Marcos did fix as his
family's residence. But assuming that Mr. Marcos had fixed any of these
places as the conjugal residence, what petitioner gained upon marriage
was actual residence. She did not lose her domicile of origin.
On the other hand, the common law concept of
"matrimonial domicile" appears to have been incorporated, as a result of
our jurisprudential experiences after the drafting of the Civil Code of
1950, into the New Family Code. To underscore the difference between
the intentions of the Civil Code and the Family Code drafters, the term
residence has been supplanted by the term domicile in an entirely new
provision (Art. 69) distinctly different in meaning and spirit from that
found in Article 110. The provision recognizes revolutionary changes in
the concept of women's rights in the intervening years by making the
choice of domicile a product of mutual agreement between the spouses. 46
Without
as much belaboring the point, the term residence may mean one thing in
civil law (or under the Civil Code) and quite another thing in political
law. What stands clear is that insofar as the Civil Code is
concerned-affecting the rights and obligations of husband and wife — the
term residence should only be interpreted to mean "actual residence."
The inescapable conclusion derived from this unambiguous civil law
delineation therefore, is that when petitioner married the former
President in 1954, she kept her domicile of origin and merely gained a
new home, not a domicilium necessarium.
Even assuming for the sake of argument that
petitioner gained a new "domicile" after her marriage and only acquired a
right to choose a new one after her husband died, petitioner's acts
following her return to the country clearly indicate that she not only
impliedly but expressly chose her domicile of origin (assuming this was
lost by operation of law) as her domicile. This "choice" was
unequivocally expressed in her letters to the Chairman of the PCGG when
petitioner sought the PCGG's permission to "rehabilitate (our) ancestral
house in Tacloban and Farm in Olot, Leyte. . . to make them livable for
the Marcos family to have a home in our homeland." 47
Furthermore, petitioner obtained her residence certificate in 1992 in
Tacloban, Leyte, while living in her brother's house, an act which
supports the domiciliary intention clearly manifested in her letters to
the PCGG Chairman. She could not have gone straight to her home in San
Juan, as it was in a state of disrepair, having been previously looted
by vandals. Her "homes" and "residences" following her arrival in
various parts of Metro Manila merely qualified as temporary or "actual
residences," not domicile. Moreover, and proceeding from our discussion
pointing out specific situations where the female spouse either reverts
to her domicile of origin or chooses a new one during the subsistence of
the marriage, it would be highly illogical for us to assume that she
cannot regain her original domicile upon the death of her husband absent
a positive act of selecting a new one where situations exist within the
subsistence of the marriage itself where the wife gains a domicile
different from her husband.
In the light of all the principles relating to
residence and domicile enunciated by this court up to this point, we are
persuaded that the facts established by the parties weigh heavily in
favor of a conclusion supporting petitioner's claim of legal residence
or domicile in the First District of Leyte.
II. The jurisdictional issue
Petitioner alleges that the jurisdiction of the
COMELEC had already lapsed considering that the assailed resolutions
were rendered on April 24, 1995, fourteen (14) days before the election
in violation of Section 78 of the Omnibus Election Code. 48
Moreover, petitioner contends that it is the House of Representatives
Electoral Tribunal and not the COMELEC which has jurisdiction over the
election of members of the House of Representatives in accordance with
Article VI Sec. 17 of the Constitution. This is untenable.
It is a settled doctrine that a statute requiring
rendition of judgment within a specified time is generally construed to
be merely directory, 49
"so that non-compliance with them does not invalidate the judgment on
the theory that if the statute had intended such result it would have
clearly indicated it." 50
The difference between a mandatory and a directory provision is often
made on grounds of necessity. Adopting the same view held by several
American authorities, this court in Marcelino vs. Cruz held that: 51
The difference between a mandatory and directory
provision is often determined on grounds of expediency, the reason being
that less injury results to the general public by disregarding than
enforcing the letter of the law.
In Trapp v. Mc Cormick, a case calling
for the interpretation of a statute containing a limitation of thirty
(30) days within which a decree may be entered without the consent of
counsel, it was held that "the statutory provisions which may be thus
departed from with impunity, without affecting the validity of statutory
proceedings, are usually those which relate to the mode or time of
doing that which is essential to effect the aim and purpose of the
Legislature or some incident of the essential act." Thus, in said case,
the statute under examination was construed merely to be directory.
The mischief in
petitioner's contending that the COMELEC should have abstained from
rendering a decision after the period stated in the Omnibus Election
Code because it lacked jurisdiction, lies in the fact that our courts
and other quasi-judicial bodies would then refuse to render judgments
merely on the ground of having failed to reach a decision within a given
or prescribed period.
In any event, with the enactment of Sections 6 and 7 of R.A. 6646 in relation to Section 78 of B.P. 881, 52
it is evident that the respondent Commission does not lose jurisdiction
to hear and decide a pending disqualification case under Section 78 of
B.P. 881 even after the elections.
As to the House of Representatives Electoral
Tribunal's supposed assumption of jurisdiction over the issue of
petitioner's qualifications after the May 8, 1995 elections, suffice it
to say that HRET's jurisdiction as the sole judge of all contests
relating to the elections, returns and qualifications of members of
Congress begins only after a candidate has become a member of the House
of Representatives. 53
Petitioner not being a member of the House of Representatives, it is
obvious that the HRET at this point has no jurisdiction over the
question.
It would be an abdication of many of the ideals
enshrined in the 1987 Constitution for us to either to ignore or
deliberately make distinctions in law solely on the basis of the
personality of a petitioner in a case. Obviously a distinction was made
on such a ground here. Surely, many established principles of law, even
of election laws were flouted for the sake perpetuating power during the
pre-EDSA regime. We renege on these sacred ideals, including the
meaning and spirit of EDSA ourselves bending established principles of
principles of law to deny an individual what he or she justly deserves
in law. Moreover, in doing so, we condemn ourselves to repeat the
mistakes of the past.
WHEREFORE, having determined that petitioner
possesses the necessary residence qualifications to run for a seat in
the House of Representatives in the First District of Leyte, the
COMELEC's questioned Resolutions dated April 24, May 7, May 11, and May
25, 1995 are hereby SET ASIDE. Respondent COMELEC is hereby directed to
order the Provincial Board of Canvassers to proclaim petitioner as the
duly elected Representative of the First District of Leyte.
SO ORDERED.
Feliciano, J., is on leave.
Separate Opinions
PUNO, J., concurring:
It was Aristotle
who taught mankind that things that are alike should be treated alike,
while things that are unalike should be treated unalike in proportion to
their unalikeness. 1
Like other candidates, petitioner has clearly met the residence
requirement provided by Section 6, Article VI of the Constitution. 2
We cannot disqualify her and treat her unalike, for the Constitution
guarantees equal protection of the law. I proceed from the following
factual and legal propositions:
First. There is no question that petitioner's
original domicile is in Tacloban, Leyte. Her parents were domiciled in
Tacloban. Their ancestral house is in Tacloban. They have vast real
estate in the place. Petitioner went to school and thereafter worked
there. I consider Tacloban as her initial domicile, both her domicile of
origin and her domicile of choice. Her domicile of origin as it was the
domicile of her parents when she was a minor; and her domicile of
choice, as she continued living there even after reaching the age of
majority.
Second. There is also no question that in May, 1954,
petitioner married the late President Ferdinand E. Marcos. By
contracting marriage, her domicile became subject to change by law, and
the right to change it was given by Article 110 of the Civil Code
provides:
Art. 110. The husband shall fix the residence of the family. But the court may exempt the wife from living with the husband if he should live abroad unless in the service of the Republic. 3 (Emphasis supplied)
In De la ViƱa v. Villareal and Geopano, 4
this Court explained why the domicile of the wife ought to follow that
of the husband. We held: "The reason is founded upon the theoretic identity
of person and interest between the husband and the wife, and the
presumption that, from the nature of the relation, the home of one is
the home of the other. It is intended to promote, strengthen, and secure
their interests in this relation, as it ordinarily exists, where union
and harmony prevail." 5 In accord with this objective, Article 109 of the Civil Code also obligated the husband and wife "to live together."
Third. The difficult issues start as we determine whether petitioner's marriage to former President Marcos ipso facto resulted in the loss of her Tacloban domicile. I respectfully submit that her marriage by itself alone
did not cause her to lose her Tacloban domicile. Article 110 of the
Civil Code merely gave the husband the right to fix the domicile of the
family. In the exercise of the right, the husband may explicitly choose the prior domicile of his wife, in which case, the wife's domicile remains unchanged. The husband can also implicitly acquiesce to his wife's prior domicile even if it is different. So we held in de la ViƱa, 6
. . . . When married women as well as children subject to parental authority live, with the acquiescence of their husbands or fathers, in a place distinct from where the latter live, they have their own independent domicile. . . .
It is not,
therefore, the mere fact of marriage but the deliberate choice of a
different domicile by the husband that will change the domicile of a
wife from what it was prior to their marriage. The domiciliary decision
made by the husband in the exercise of the right conferred by Article
110 of the Civil Code binds the wife. Any and all acts of a wife during
her coverture contrary to the domiciliary choice of the husband cannot
change in any way the domicile legally fixed by the husband. These acts
are void not only because the wife lacks the capacity to choose her
domicile but also because they are contrary to law and public policy.
In the case at bench, it is not disputed that former
President Marcos exercised his right to fix the family domicile and
established it in Batac, Ilocos Norte, where he was then the
congressman. At that particular point of time and throughout their married life, petitioner lost her domicile in Tacloban, Leyte.
Since petitioner's Batac domicile has been fixed by operation of law,
it was not affected in 1959 when her husband was elected as Senator,
when they lived in San Juan, Rizal and where she registered as a voter.
It was not also affected in 1965 when her husband was elected President,
when they lived in MalacaƱang Palace, and when she registered as a
voter in San Miguel, Manila. Nor was it affected when she served as a
member of the Batasang Pambansa, Minister of Human Settlements
and Governor of Metro Manila during the incumbency of her husband as
President of the nation. Under Article 110 of the Civil Code, it was
only her husband who could change the family domicile in Batac and the
evidence shows he did not effect any such change. To a large degree,
this follows the common law that "a woman on her marriage loses her own
domicile and by operation of law, acquires that of her husband, no matter where the wife actually lives or what she believes or intends." 7
Fourth. The more difficult task is how to interpret the effect of the death on September 28, 1989 of former President Marcos on petitioner's Batac domicile. The issue is of first impression in
our jurisdiction and two (2) schools of thought contend for acceptance.
One is espoused by our distinguished colleague, Mr. Justice Davide,
Jr., heavily relying on American authorities. 8 He echoes the theory that after the husband's death, the wife retains the last domicile of her husband until she makes an actual change.
I do not subscribe to this submission. The American
case law that the wife still retains her dead husband's domicile is
based on ancient common law which we can no longer apply in the Philippine setting today.
The common law identified the domicile of a wife as that of the husband
and denied to her the power of acquiring a domicile of her own separate
and apart from him. 9 Legal scholars agree that two (2) reasons support this common law doctrine. The first reason as
pinpointed by the legendary Blackstone is derived from the view that
"the very being or legal existence of the woman is suspended during
the marriage, or at least is incorporated and consolidated into that of the husband." 10 The second reason lies in "the desirability of having the interests of each member of the family unit governed by the same law." 11 The presumption that the wife retains the domicile of her deceased husband is an extension of this common law concept. The concept and its extension have provided some of the most iniquitous jurisprudence against women. It was under common law that the 1873 American case of Bradwell v. Illinois 12 was decided where women were denied the right to practice law. It was unblushingly ruled that "the natural and proper timidity and delicacy which belongs to the female sex evidently unfits it for many of the occupations of civil life . . . This is the law of the Creator." Indeed, the rulings relied upon by Mr. Justice Davide in CJS 13 and AM JUR 2d 14 are American state court decisions handed down between the years 1917 15 and 1938, 16 or before the time when women were accorded equality of rights with men. Undeniably, the women's liberation movement resulted in far-ranging state legislations in the United States to eliminate gender inequality. 17 Starting in the decade of the seventies, the courts likewise liberalized their rulings as they started invalidating laws infected with gender-bias. It was in 1971 when the US Supreme Court in Reed v. Reed, 18 struck a big blow for women equality when it declared as unconstitutional an Idaho law that required probate courts to choose male family members over females as estate administrators. It held that mere administrative inconvenience cannot justify a sex-based distinction. These significant changes both in law and in case law on the status of women virtually obliterated the iniquitous common law surrendering the rights of married women to their husbands based on the dubious theory of the parties' theoretic oneness. The Corpus Juris Secundum editors did not miss the relevance of this revolution on women's right as they observed: "However, it has been declared that under modern statutes changing the status of married women and departing from the common law theory of marriage, there is no reason why a wife may not acquire a separate domicile for every purpose known to the law." 19 In publishing in 1969 the Restatement of the Law, Second (Conflict of Laws 2d), the reputable American Law Institute also categorically stated that the view of Blackstone ". . . is no longer held. As the result of statutes and court decisions, a wife now possesses practically the same rights and powers as her unmarried sister." 20
the marriage, or at least is incorporated and consolidated into that of the husband." 10 The second reason lies in "the desirability of having the interests of each member of the family unit governed by the same law." 11 The presumption that the wife retains the domicile of her deceased husband is an extension of this common law concept. The concept and its extension have provided some of the most iniquitous jurisprudence against women. It was under common law that the 1873 American case of Bradwell v. Illinois 12 was decided where women were denied the right to practice law. It was unblushingly ruled that "the natural and proper timidity and delicacy which belongs to the female sex evidently unfits it for many of the occupations of civil life . . . This is the law of the Creator." Indeed, the rulings relied upon by Mr. Justice Davide in CJS 13 and AM JUR 2d 14 are American state court decisions handed down between the years 1917 15 and 1938, 16 or before the time when women were accorded equality of rights with men. Undeniably, the women's liberation movement resulted in far-ranging state legislations in the United States to eliminate gender inequality. 17 Starting in the decade of the seventies, the courts likewise liberalized their rulings as they started invalidating laws infected with gender-bias. It was in 1971 when the US Supreme Court in Reed v. Reed, 18 struck a big blow for women equality when it declared as unconstitutional an Idaho law that required probate courts to choose male family members over females as estate administrators. It held that mere administrative inconvenience cannot justify a sex-based distinction. These significant changes both in law and in case law on the status of women virtually obliterated the iniquitous common law surrendering the rights of married women to their husbands based on the dubious theory of the parties' theoretic oneness. The Corpus Juris Secundum editors did not miss the relevance of this revolution on women's right as they observed: "However, it has been declared that under modern statutes changing the status of married women and departing from the common law theory of marriage, there is no reason why a wife may not acquire a separate domicile for every purpose known to the law." 19 In publishing in 1969 the Restatement of the Law, Second (Conflict of Laws 2d), the reputable American Law Institute also categorically stated that the view of Blackstone ". . . is no longer held. As the result of statutes and court decisions, a wife now possesses practically the same rights and powers as her unmarried sister." 20
In the case at bench, we have to decide whether we should continue clinging to the anachronistic common law
that demeans women, especially married women. I submit that the Court
has no choice except to break away from this common law rule, the root
of the many degradations of Filipino women. Before 1988, our laws
particularly the Civil Code, were full of gender discriminations against
women. Our esteemed colleague, Madam Justice Flerida Ruth Romero, cited
a few of them as follows: 21
xxx xxx xxx
Legal Disabilities Suffered by Wives
Not generally known is the fact that under the
Civil Code, wives suffer under certain restrictions or disabilities. For
instance, the wife cannot accept gifts from others, regardless of the
sex of the giver or the value of the gift, other than from her very
close relatives, without her husband's consent. She may accept only
from, say, her parents, parents-in-law, brothers, sisters and the
relatives within the so-called fourth civil degree. She may not exercise
her profession or occupation or engage in business if her husband
objects on serious grounds or if his income is sufficient to support
their family in accordance with their social standing. As to what
constitutes "serious grounds" for objecting, this is within the
discretion of the husband.
xxx xxx xxx
Because of the present inequitable situation, the
amendments to the Civil Law being proposed by the University of the
Philippines Law Center would allow absolute divorce which severes the
matrimonial ties, such that the divorced spouses are free to get married
a year after the divorce is decreed by the courts. However, in order to
place the husband and wife on an equal footing insofar as the bases for
divorce are concerned, the following are specified as the grounds for
absolute divorce: (1) adultery or having a paramour committed by the
respondent in any of the ways specified in the Revised Penal Code or (2)
an attempt by the respondent against the life of the petitioner which
amounts to attempted parricide under the Revised Penal Code; (3)
abandonment of the petitioner by the respondent without just cause for a
period of three consecutive years; or (4) habitual maltreatment.
With respect to property relations, the husband is
automatically the administrator of the conjugal property owned in common
by the married couple even if the wife may be the more astute or
enterprising partner. The law does not leave it to the spouses to decide
who shall act as such administrator. Consequently, the husband is
authorized to engage in acts and enter into transactions beneficial to
the conjugal partnership. The wife, however, cannot similarly bind the
partnership without the husband's consent.
And while both exercise joint parental authority over
their children, it is the father whom the law designates as the legal
administrator of the property pertaining to the unemancipated child.
Taking the lead in
Asia, our government exerted efforts, principally through legislations,
to eliminate inequality between men and women in our land. The
watershed came on August 3, 1988 when our Family Code took effect which,
among others, terminated the unequal treatment of husband and wife as
to their rights and responsibilities. 22
The
Family Code attained this elusive objective by giving new rights to
married women and by abolishing sex-based privileges of husbands. Among
others, married women are now given the joint right to administer the
family property, whether in the absolute community system or in the
system of conjugal partnership; 23 joint parental authority over their minor children, both over their persons as well as their properties; 24 joint responsibility for the support of the family; 25 the right to jointly manage the household; 26 and, the right to object to their husband's exercise of profession, occupation, business or activity. 27 Of
particular relevance to the case at bench is Article 69 of the Family
Code which took away the exclusive right of the husband to fix the
family domicile and gave it jointly to the husband and the wife, thus:
Art. 69. The husband and wife shall fix the family domicile. In case of disagreement, the court shall decide.
The court may exempt one spouse from living with the
other if the latter should live abroad or there are other valid and
compelling reasons for the exemption. However, such exemption shall not
apply if the same is not compatible with the solidarity of the family.
(Emphasis supplied)
Article 69 repealed Article 110 of the Civil Code.
Commenting on the duty of the husband and wife to live together, former
Madam Justice Alice Sempio-Diy of the Court of Appeals specified the
instances when a wife may now refuse to live with her husband, thus: 28
(2) The wife has the duty to live with her husband, but she may refuse to do so in certain cases like:
(a) If the place chosen by the husband as family residence is dangerous to her Life;
(b) If the husband subjects her to maltreatment or abusive conduct or insults, making common life impossible;
(c) If the husband compels her to live with his
parents, but she cannot get along with her mother-in-law and they have
constant quarrels (Del Rosario v. Del Rosario, CA, 46 OG 6122);
(d) Where the husband has continuously carried
illicit relations for 10 years with different women and treated his wife
roughly and without consideration. (Dadivas v. Villanueva, 54 Phil.
92);
(e) Where the husband spent his time in gambling,
giving no money to his family for food and necessities, and at the same
time insulting his wife and laying hands on her. (Panuncio v. Sula, CA,
34 OG 129);
(f) If the husband has no fixed residence and lives a vagabond life as a tramp (1 Manresa 329);
(g) If the husband is carrying on a shameful business at home (Gahn v. Darby, 38 La. Ann. 70).
The inescapable conclusion is that our Family Code has completely emancipated the wife from the control of the husband,
thus abandoning the parties' theoretic identity of interest. No less
than the late revered Mr. Justice J.B.L. Reyes who chaired the Civil
Code Revision Committee of the UP Law Center gave this insightful view
in one of his rare lectures after retirement: 29
xxx xxx xxx
The Family Code is primarily intended to reform the
family law so as to emancipate the wife from the exclusive control of
the husband and to place her at parity with him insofar as the family is
concerned. The wife and the husband are now placed on equal standing by the Code.
They are now joint administrators of the family properties and exercise
joint authority over the persons and properties of their children. This
means a dual authority in the family. The husband will no longer prevail over the wife but she has to agree on all matters concerning the family. (Emphasis supplied)
In light of the
Family Code which abrogated the inequality between husband and wife as
started and perpetuated by the common law, there is no reason in espousing the anomalous rule that the wife still retains the domicile of her dead husband.
Article 110 of the Civil Code which provides the statutory support for
this stance has been repealed by Article 69 of the Family Code. By its
repeal, it becomes a dead-letter law, and we are not free to resurrect
it by giving it further effect in any way or manner such as by ruling
that the petitioner is still bound by the domiciliary determination of
her dead husband.
Aside from reckoning with the Family Code, we have to
consider our Constitution and its firm guarantees of due process and
equal protection of
law. 30 It can hardly be doubted that the common law imposition on a married woman of her dead husband's domicile even beyond his grave is patently discriminatory to women. It is a gender-based discrimination and is not rationally related to the objective of promoting family solidarity. It cannot survive a constitutional challenge. Indeed, compared with our previous fundamental laws, the 1987 Constitution is more concerned with equality between sexes as it explicitly commands that the State ". . . shall ensure fundamental equality before the law of women and men." To be exact, section 14, Article II provides: "The State recognizes the role of women in nation building, and shall ensure fundamental equality before the law of women and men. We shall be transgressing the sense and essence of this constitutional mandate if we insist on giving our women the caveman's treatment.
law. 30 It can hardly be doubted that the common law imposition on a married woman of her dead husband's domicile even beyond his grave is patently discriminatory to women. It is a gender-based discrimination and is not rationally related to the objective of promoting family solidarity. It cannot survive a constitutional challenge. Indeed, compared with our previous fundamental laws, the 1987 Constitution is more concerned with equality between sexes as it explicitly commands that the State ". . . shall ensure fundamental equality before the law of women and men." To be exact, section 14, Article II provides: "The State recognizes the role of women in nation building, and shall ensure fundamental equality before the law of women and men. We shall be transgressing the sense and essence of this constitutional mandate if we insist on giving our women the caveman's treatment.
Prescinding from these premises, I respectfully submit that the better stance is to rule that petitioner reacquired her Tacloban domicile upon the death of her husband in 1989.
This is the necessary consequence of the view that petitioner's Batac
dictated domicile did not continue after her husband's death; otherwise,
she would have no domicile and that will violate the universal rule
that no person can be without a domicile at any point of time. This
stance also restores the right of petitioner to choose her domicile
before it was taken away by Article 110 of the Civil Code, a right now
recognized by the Family Code and protected by the Constitution.
Likewise, I cannot see the fairness of the common law requiring
petitioner to choose again her Tacloban domicile before she could be
released from her Batac domicile. She lost her Tacloban domicile not
through her act but through the act of her deceased husband when he
fixed their domicile in Batac. Her husband is dead and he cannot rule
her beyond the grave. The law disabling her to choose her own domicile
has been repealed. Considering all these, common law should not put the
burden on petitioner to prove she has abandoned her dead husband's
domicile. There is neither rhyme nor reason for this gender-based
burden.
But even assuming arguendo that there is need for
convincing proof that petitioner chose to reacquire her Tacloban
domicile, still, the records reveal ample evidence to this effect. In her affidavit submitted to the respondent COMELEC, petitioner averred:
xxx xxx xxx
36. In November, 1991, I came home to our beloved
country, after several requests for my return were denied by President
Corazon C. Aquino, and after I filed suits for our Government to issue
me my passport.
37. But I came home without the mortal remains of my
beloved husband, President Ferdinand E. Marcos, which the Government
considered a threat to the national security and welfare.
38. Upon my return to the country, I wanted to
immediately live and reside in Tacloban City or in Olot, Tolosa, Leyte,
even if my residences there were not livable as they had been destroyed
and cannibalized. The PCGG, however, did not permit and allow me.
39. As a consequence, I had to live at various times
in the Westin Philippine Plaza in Pasay City, a friend's apartment on
Ayala Avenue, a house in South Forbes Park which my daughter rented, and
Pacific Plaza, all in Makati.
40. After the 1992 Presidential Elections, I lived
and resided in the residence of my brother in San Jose, Tacloban City,
and pursued my negotiations with PCGG to recover my sequestered
residences in Tacloban City and Barangay Olot, Tolosa, Leyte.
40.1 In preparation for my observance of All Saints'
Day and All Souls' Day that year, I renovated my parents' burial grounds
and entombed their bones which had been excalvated, unearthed and
scattered.
41. On November 29, 1993, I formally wrote PCGG Chairman Magtanggol Gunigundo for permissions to —
. . . rehabilitate . . . (o)ur ancestral house in
Tacloban and farmhouse in Olot, Leyte . . . to make them livable for us
the Marcos family to have a home in our own motherland.
xxx xxx xxx
42. It was only on 06 June 1994, however, when PCGG
Chairman Gunigundo, in his letter to Col. Simeon Kempis, Jr., PCGG
Region 8 Representative, allowed me to repair and renovate my Leyte
residences. I quote part of his letter:
Dear Col. Kempis,
Upon representation by Mrs. Imelda R. Marcos to this
Commission, that she intends to visit our sequestered properties in
Leyte, please allow her access thereto. She may also cause repairs and
renovation of the sequestered properties, in which event, it shall be
understood that her undertaking said repairs is not authorization for
her to take over said properties, and that all expenses shall be for her
account and not reimbursable. Please extend the necessary courtesy to
her.
xxx xxx xxx
43. I was not permitted, however, to live and stay in
the Sto. NiƱo Shrine residence in Tacloban City where I wanted to stay
and reside, after repairs and renovations were completed. In August
1994, I transferred from San Jose, Tacloban City, to my residence in
Barangay Olot, Tolosa, Leyte, when PCGG permitted me to stay and live
there.
It is then clear that in 1992 petitioner reestablished her domicile in the First District of Leyte.
It is not disputed that in 1992, she first lived at the house of her
brother in San Jose, Tacloban City and later, in August 1994, she
transferred her residence in Barangay Olot, Tolosa, Leyte. Both Tacloban
City and the municipality of Olot are within the First District of
Leyte. Since petitioner reestablished her old domicile in 1992 in the
First District of Leyte, she more than complied with the constitutional
requirement of residence
". . . for a period of not less than one year immediately preceding the day of the election," i.e., the May 8, 1995 elections.
". . . for a period of not less than one year immediately preceding the day of the election," i.e., the May 8, 1995 elections.
The evidence presented by the private respondent to negate the Tacloban domicile of petitioner is nil.
He presented petitioner's Voter's Registration Record filed with the
Board of Election Inspectors of Precinct 10-A of Barangay Olot, Tolosa,
Leyte wherein she stated that her period of residence in said barangay
was six (6) months as of the date of her filing of said Voter's
Registration Record on January 28, 1995. 31 This statement in petitioner's Voter's Registration Record is a non-prejudicial admission. The Constitution requires at least one (1) year residence in the district
in which the candidate shall be elected. In the case at bench, the
reference is the First District of Leyte. Petitioner's statement proved that she resided in Olot six (6) months before January 28, 1995 but did not disprove
that she has also resided in Tacloban City starting 1992. As
aforestated, Olot and Tacloban City are both within the First District
of Leyte, hence, her six (6) months residence in Olot should be counted
not against, but in her favor. Private respondent also presented
petitioner's Certificate of Candidacy filed on March 8, 1995 32
where she placed seven (7) months after Item No. 8 which called for
information regarding "residence in the constituency where I seek to be
elected immediately preceding the election." Again, this original
certificate of candidacy has no evidentiary value because an March 1,
1995 it was corrected by petitioner. In her Amended/Corrected
Certificate of Candidacy, 33 petitioner wrote "since childhood" after Item No. 8. The amendment of a certificate of candidacy to correct a bona fide mistake has been allowed by this Court as a matter of course and as a matter of right. As we held in Alialy v. COMELEC, 34 viz.:
xxx xxx xxx
The absence of the signature of the Secretary of the
local chapter N.P in the original certificate of candidacy presented
before the deadline September 11, 1959, did not render the certificate
invalid. The amendment of the certificate, although at a date after
the deadline, but before the election, was substantial compliance with
the law, and the defect was cured.
It goes without
saying that petitioner's erroneous Certificate of Candidacy filed on
March 8, 1995 cannot be used as evidence against her. Private
respondent's petition for the disqualification of petitioner rested
alone on these two (2) brittle pieces of documentary evidence —
petitioner's Voter's Registration Record and her original Certificate of
Candidacy. Ranged against the evidence of the petitioner showing her
ceaseless contacts with Tacloban, private respondent's two (2) pieces of
evidence are too insufficient to disqualify petitioner, more so, to
deny her the right to represent the people of the First District of
Leyte who have overwhelmingly voted for her.
Fifth. Section 10, Article IX-C of the Constitution mandates that "bona fide candidates for any public office shall be free from any form of harassment and discrimination." 35
A detached reading of the records of the case at bench will show that
all forms of legal and extra-legal obstacles have been thrown against
petitioner to prevent her from running as the people's representative in
the First District of Leyte. In petitioner's Answer to the petition to
disqualify her, she averred: 36
xxx xxx xxx
10. Petitioner's (herein private respondent Montejo)
motive in filing the instant petition is devious. When respondent
(petitioner herein) announced that she was intending to register as a
voter in Tacloban City and run for Congress in the First District of
Leyte, petitioner (Montejo) immediately opposed her intended
registration by writing a letter stating that "she is not a resident of
said city but of Barangay Olot, Tolosa, Leyte." (Annex "2" of
respondent's affidavit, Annex "2"). After respondent (petitioner herein)
had registered as a voter in Tolosa following completion of her
six-month actual residence therein, petitioner (Montejo) filed a
petition with the COMELEC to transfer the town of Tolosa from the First
District to the Second District and pursued such move up to the Supreme
Court in G.R. No. 118702, his purpose being to remove respondent
(petitioner herein) as petitioner's (Montejo's) opponent in the
congressional election in the First District. He also filed a bill,
along with other Leyte Congressmen, seeking to create another
legislative district, to remove the town of Tolosa out of the First
District and to make it a part of the new district, to achieve his
purpose. However, such bill did not pass the Senate. Having, failed on
such moves, petitioner now filed the instant petition, for the same
objective, as it is obvious that he is afraid to submit himself along
with respondent (petitioner herein) for the judgment and verdict of the
electorate of the First District of Leyte in an honest, orderly,
peaceful, free and clean elections on May 8, 1995.
These allegations which private respondent did not challenge were not lost
to the perceptive eye of Commissioner Maambong who in his Dissenting Opinion, 37 held:
to the perceptive eye of Commissioner Maambong who in his Dissenting Opinion, 37 held:
xxx xxx xxx
Prior to the registration date — January 28, 1995 the
petitioner (herein private respondent Montejo) wrote the Election
Officer of Tacloban City not to allow respondent (petitioner herein) to
register thereat since she is a resident of Tolosa and not Tacloban
City. The purpose of this move of the petitioner (Montejo) is not lost
to (sic) the Commission. In UND No. 95-001 (In the matter of
the Legislative Districts of the Provinces of Leyte, Iloilo, and South
Cotabato, Out of Which the New Provinces of Biliran, Guimaras and
Saranggani Were Respectively Created), . . . Hon. Cirilo Roy G.
Montejo, Representative, First District of Leyte, wanted the
Municipality of Tolosa, in the First District of Leyte, transferred to
the Second District of Leyte. The Hon. Sergio A.F. Apostol,
Representative of the Second District of Leyte, opposed the move of the
petitioner (Montejo). Under Comelec Resolution No. 2736 (December 29,
1994), the Commission on Elections refused to make the proposed
transfer. Petitioner (Montejo) filed "Motion for Reconsideration of Resolution
No. 2736" which the Commission denied in a Resolution promulgated on February 1, 1995. Petitioner (Montejo) filed a petition for certiorari before the Honorable Supreme Court (Cirilo Roy G. Montejo vs. Commission on Elections, G.R. No. 118702) questioning the resolution of the Commission. Believing that he could get a favorable ruling from the Supreme Court, petitioner (Montejo) tried to make sure that the respondent (petitioner herein) will register as a voter in Tolosa so that she will be forced to run as Representative not in the First but in the Second District.
No. 2736" which the Commission denied in a Resolution promulgated on February 1, 1995. Petitioner (Montejo) filed a petition for certiorari before the Honorable Supreme Court (Cirilo Roy G. Montejo vs. Commission on Elections, G.R. No. 118702) questioning the resolution of the Commission. Believing that he could get a favorable ruling from the Supreme Court, petitioner (Montejo) tried to make sure that the respondent (petitioner herein) will register as a voter in Tolosa so that she will be forced to run as Representative not in the First but in the Second District.
It did not happen. On March 16, 1995, the Honorable Supreme Court unanimously promulgated a "Decision," penned by Associate Justice Reynato S. Puno, the dispositive portion of which reads:
IN VIEW WHEREOF, Section 1 of Resolution No. 2736
insofar as it transferred the municipality of Capoocan of the Second
District and the municipality of Palompon of the Fourth District to the
Third District of the province of Leyte, is annulled and set aside. We
also deny the Petition praying for the transfer of the municipality of
Tolosa from the First District to the Second District of the province of
Leyte. No costs.
Petitioner's (Montejo's) plan did not work. But the
respondent (petitioner herein) was constrained to register in the
Municipality of Tolosa where her house is instead of Tacloban City, her
domicile. In any case, both Tacloban City and Tolosa are in the First
Legislative District.
All these attempts
to misuse our laws and legal processes are forms of rank harassments
and invidious discriminations against petitioner to deny her equal
access to a public office. We cannot commit any hermeneutic violence to
the Constitution by torturing the meaning of equality, the end result of
which will allow the harassment and discrimination of petitioner who
has lived a controversial life, a past of alternating light and shadow.
There is but one Constitution for all Filipinos. Petitioner cannot be
adjudged by a "different" Constitution, and the worst way to interpret
the Constitution is to inject in its interpretation, bile and
bitterness.
Sixth. In Gallego v. Vera, 38
we explained that the reason for this residence requirement is "to
exclude a stranger or newcomer, unacquainted, with the conditions and
needs of a community and not identified with the latter, from an
elective office to serve that community . . . ." Petitioner's lifetime
contacts with the First District of Leyte cannot be contested. Nobody
can claim that she is not acquainted with its problems because she is a
stranger to the place. None can argue she cannot satisfy the intent of
the Constitution.
Seventh. In resolving election cases, a dominant
consideration is the need to effectuate the will of the electorate. The
election results show that petitioner received Seventy Thousand Four
Hundred Seventy-one (70,471) votes, while private respondent got only
Thirty-Six Thousand Eight Hundred Thirty-Three (36,833) votes.
Petitioner is clearly the overwhelming choice of the electorate of the
First District of Leyte and this is not a sleight of statistics. We
cannot frustrate this sovereign will on highly arguable technical
considerations. In case of doubt, we should lean towards a rule that
will give life to the people's political judgment.
A final point. The case at bench provides the
Court with the rare opportunity to rectify the inequality of status
between women and men by rejecting the iniquitous common law precedents
on the domicile of married women and by redefining domicile in accord
with our own culture, law, and Constitution. To rule that a married
woman is eternally tethered to the domicile dictated by her dead husband
is to preserve the anachronistic and anomalous balance of advantage of a
husband over his wife. We should not allow the dead to govern the
living even if the glories of yesteryears seduce us to shout long live
the dead! The Family Code buried this gender-based discrimination
against married women and we should not excavate what has been entombed.
More importantly, the Constitution forbids it.
I vote to grant the petition.Bellosillo and Melo, JJ., concur.
FRANCISCO, J., concurring:
I concur with Mr.
Justice Kapunan's ponencia finding petitioner qualified for the position
of Representative of the First Congressional District of Leyte. I wish,
however, to express a few comments on the issue of petitioner's
domicile.
Domicile has been defined as that place in which a
person's habitation is fixed, without any present intention of removing
therefrom, and that place is properly the domicile of a person in which
he has voluntarily fixed his abode, or habitation, not for a mere
special or temporary purpose, but with a present intention of making it
his permanent home (28 C.J.S. §1). It denotes a fixed permanent
residence to which when absent for business, or pleasure, or for like
reasons one intends to return, and depends on facts and circumstances,
in the sense that they disclose intent. (Ong Huan Tin v. Republic, 19
SCRA 966, 969)
Domicile is classified into domicile of origin and
domicile of choice. The law attributes to every individual a domicile of
origin, which is the domicile of his parents, or of the head of his
family, or of the person on whom he is legally dependent at the time of
his birth. While the domicile of origin is generally the place where one
is born or reared, it maybe elsewhere (28 C.J.S. §5). Domicile of
choice, on the other hand, is the place which the person has elected and
chosen for himself to displace his previous domicile; it has for its
true basis or foundation the intention of the person (28 C.J.S. §6). In
order to hold that a person has abandoned his domicile and acquired a
new one called domicile of choice, the following requisites must concur,
namely, (a) residence or bodily presence in the new locality, (b)
intention to remain there or animus manendi, and (c) an intention to abandon the old domicile or animus non revertendi (Romualdez
v. RTC, Br. 7, Tacloban City, 226 SCRA 408, 415). A third
classification is domicile by operation of law which attributes to a
person a domicile independent of his own intention or actual residence,
ordinarily resulting from legal domestic relations, as that of the wife
arising from marriage, or the relation of a parent and a child (28
C.J.S. §7).
In election law, when our Constitution speaks of
residence for election purposes it means domicile (Co v. Electoral
Tribunal of the House of Representatives, 199 SCRA 692, 713; Nuval v.
Guray, 52 Phil. 645, 651). To my mind, public respondent Commission on
Elections misapplied this concept, of domicile which led to petitioner's
disqualification by ruling that petitioner failed to comply with the
constitutionally mandated one-year residence requirement. Apparently,
public respondent Commission deemed as conclusive petitioner's stay and
registration as voter in many places as conduct disclosing her intent to
abandon her established domicile of origin in Tacloban, Leyte. In
several decisions, though, the Court has laid down the rule that
registration of a voter in a place other than his place of origin is not
sufficient to constitute abandonment or loss of such residence (Faypon
v. Quirino, 96 Phil. 294, 300). Respondent Commission offered no cogent
reason to depart from this rule except to surmise petitioner's intent of
abandoning her domicile of origin.
It has been suggested that petitioner's domicile of
origin was supplanted by a new domicile due to her marriage, a domicile
by operation of law. The proposition is that upon the death of her
husband in 1989 she retains her husband's domicile, i.e., Batac, Ilocos Norte, until she makes an actual change thereof. I find this proposition quite untenable.
Tacloban, Leyte, is petitioner's domicile of origin which was involuntarily supplanted with another, i.e.,
Batac, Ilocos Norte, upon her marriage in 1954 with then Congressman
Marcos. By legal fiction she followed the domicile of her husband. In my
view, the reason for the law is for the spouses to fully and
effectively perform their marital duties and obligations to one another. 1
The question of domicile, however, is not affected by the fact that it
was the legal or moral duty of the individual to reside in a given place
(28 C.J.S. §11). Thus, while the wife retains her marital domicile so
long as the marriage subsists, she automatically loses it upon the
latter's termination, for the reason behind the law then ceases.
Otherwise, petitioner, after her marriage was ended by the death of her
husband, would be placed in a quite absurd and unfair situation of
having been freed from all wifely obligations yet made to hold on to one
which no longer serves any meaningful purpose.
It is my view therefore that petitioner reverted to
her original domicile of Tacloban, Leyte upon her husband's death
without even signifying her intention to that effect. It is for the
private respondent to prove, not for petitioner to disprove, that
petitioner has effectively abandoned Tacloban, Leyte for Batac, Ilocos
Norte or for some other place/s. The clear rule is that it is the party
(herein private respondent) claiming that a person has abandoned or lost
his residence of origin who must show and prove preponderantly such
abandonment or loss (Faypon v. Quirino, supra at 298; 28 C.J.S.
§16), because the presumption is strongly in favor of an original or
former domicile, as against an acquired one (28 C.J.S. §16). Private
respondent unfortunately failed to discharge this burden as the record
is devoid of convincing proof that petitioner has acquired whether
voluntarily or involuntarily, a new domicile to replace her domicile of
origin.
The records, on the contrary, clearly show that
petitioner has complied with the constitutional one-year residence
requirement. After her exile abroad, she returned to the Philippines in
1991 to reside in Olot, Tolosa, Leyte, but the Presidential Commission
on Good Government which sequestered her residential house and other
properties forbade her necessitating her transient stay in various
places in Manila (Affidavit p.6, attached as Annex I of the Petition).
In 1992, she ran for the position of president writing in her
certificate of candidacy her residence as San Juan, Metro Manila. After
her loss therein, she went back to Tacloban City, acquired her residence
certificate 2
and resided with her brother in San Jose. She resided in San Jose,
Tacloban City until August of 1994 when she was allowed by the PCGG to
move and reside in her sequestered residential house in Olot, Tolosa,
Leyte (Annex I, p. 6). 3
It was in the same month of August when she applied for the
cancellation of her previous registration in San Juan, Metro Manila in
order to register anew as voter of Olot, Tolosa, Leyte, which she did on
January 28, 1995. From this sequence of events, I find it quite
improper to use as the reckoning period of the one-year residence
requirement the date when she applied for the cancellation of her
previous registration in San Juan, Metro Manila. The fact which private
respondent never bothered to disprove is that petitioner transferred her
residence after the 1992 presidential election from San Juan, Metro
Manila to San Jose, Tacloban City, and resided therein until August of
1994. She later transferred to Olot, Tolosa, Leyte (Annex I, p. 7). It
appearing that both Tacloban City and Tolosa, Leyte are within the First
Congressional District of Leyte, it indubitably stands that she had
more than a year of residence in the constituency she sought to be
elected. Petitioner, therefore, has satisfactorily complied with the
one-year qualification required by the 1987 Constitution.
I vote to grant the petition.ROMERO, J., separate opinion:
Petitioner has
appealed to this Court for relief after the COMELEC ruled that she was
disqualified from running for Representative of her District and that,
in the event that she should, nevertheless, muster a majority vote, her
proclamation should be suspended. Not by a straightforward ruling did
the COMELEC pronounce its decision as has been its unvarying practice in
the past, but by a startling succession of "reverse somersaults."
Indicative of its shifting stance vis-a-vis petitioner's
certificate of candidacy were first, the action of its Second Division
disqualifying her and canceling her original Certificate of Candidacy by
a vote of 2-1 on April 24, 1995; then the denial by the COMELEC en banc
of her Motion for Reconsideration on May 7, 1995, a day before the
election; then because she persisted in running, its decision on
May 11, 1995 or three days after the election, allowing her proclamation in the event that the results of the canvass should show that she obtained the highest number of votes (obviously noting that petitioner had won overwhelmingly over her opponent), but almost simultaneously reversing itself by directing that even if she wins, her proclamation should nonetheless be suspended.
May 11, 1995 or three days after the election, allowing her proclamation in the event that the results of the canvass should show that she obtained the highest number of votes (obviously noting that petitioner had won overwhelmingly over her opponent), but almost simultaneously reversing itself by directing that even if she wins, her proclamation should nonetheless be suspended.
Crucial to the resolution of the disqualification
issue presented by the case at bench is the interpretation to be given
to the one-year residency requirement imposed by the Constitution on
aspirants for a Congressional seat. 1
Bearing
in mind that the term "resident" has been held to be synonymous with
"domicile" for election purposes, it is important to determine whether
petitioner's domicile was in the First District of Leyte and if so,
whether she had resided there for at least a period of one year.
Undisputed is her domicile of origin, Tacloban, where her parents lived
at the time of her birth. Depending on what theory one adopts, the same
may have been changed when she married Ferdinand E. Marcos, then
domiciled in Batac, by operation of law. Assuming it did, his death
certainly released her from the obligation to live with him at the
residence fixed by him during his lifetime. What may confuse the layman
at this point is the fact that the term "domicile" may refer to
"domicile of origin," "domicile of choice," or "domicile by operation of
law," which subject we shall not belabor since it has been amply
discussed by the ponente and in the other separate opinions.
In any case, what assumes relevance is the divergence
of legal opinion as to the effect of the husband's death on the
domicile of the widow. Some scholars opine that the widow's domicile
remains unchanged; that the deceased husband's wishes perforce still
bind the wife he has left behind. Given this interpretation, the widow
cannot possibly go far enough to sever the domiciliary tie imposed by
her husband.
It is bad enough to interpret the law as empowering
the husband unilaterally to fix the residence or domicile of the family,
as laid down in the Civil Code, 2
but to continue giving obeisance to his wishes even after the rationale
underlying the mutual duty of the spouses to live together has ceased,
is to close one's eyes to the stark realities of the present.
At the other extreme is the position that the widow
automatically reverts to her domicile of origin upon the demise of her
husband. Does the law so abhor a vacuum that the widow has to be endowed
somehow with a domicile? To answer this question which is far from
rhetorical, one will have to keep in mind the basic principles of
domicile. Everyone must have a domicile. Then one must have only a
single domicile for the same purpose at any given time. Once
established, a domicile remains until a new one is acquired, for no
person lives who has no domicile, as defined by the law be is subject
to.
At this juncture, we are confronted with an
unexplored legal terrain in this jurisdiction, rendered more murky by
the conflicting opinions of foreign legal authorities. This being the
state of things, it is imperative as it is opportune to illumine the
darkness with the beacon light of truth, as dictated by experience and
the necessity of according petitioner her right to choose her domicile
in keeping with the enlightened global trend to recognize and protect
the human rights of women, no less than men.
Admittedly, the notion of placing women at par with
men, insofar as civil, political and social rights are concerned, is a
relatively recent phenomenon that took seed only in the middle of this
century. It is a historical fact that for over three centuries, the
Philippines had been colonized by Spain, a conservative, Catholic
country which transplanted to our shores the Old World cultures, mores
and attitudes and values. Through the imposition on our government of
the Spanish Civil Code in 1889, the people, both men and women, had no
choice but to accept such concepts as the husband's being the head of
the family and the wife's subordination to his authority. In such role,
his was the right to make vital decisions for the family. Many instances
come to mind, foremost being what is related to the issue before us,
namely, that "the husband shall fix the residence of the family." 3 Because he is made responsible for the support of the wife and the rest of the family, 4 he is also empowered to be the administrator of the conjugal property, with a few exceptions 5 and may, therefore, dispose of the conjugal partnership property for the purposes specified under the law; 6 whereas, as a general rule, the wife cannot bind the conjugal partnership without the husband's consent. 7
As regards the property pertaining to the children under parental
authority, the father is the legal administrator and only in his absence
may the mother assume his powers. 8
Demeaning to the wife's dignity are certain strictures on her personal
freedoms, practically relegating her to the position of minors and
disabled persons. To illustrate a few: The wife cannot, without the
husband's consent, acquire any gratuitous title, except from her
ascendants, descendants, parents-in-law, and collateral relatives within
the fourth degree. 9
With respect to her employment, the husband wields a veto power in the
case the wife exercises her profession or occupation or engages in
business, provided his income is sufficient for the family, according to
its social standing and his opposition is founded on serious and valid
grounds. 10 Most offensive, if not repulsive, to the liberal-minded is
the effective prohibition upon a widow to get married till after three
hundred days following the death of her husband, unless in the meantime,
she has given birth to a child. 11 The mother who contracts a
subsequent marriage loses the parental authority over her children,
unless the deceased husband, father of the latter, has expressly
provided in his will that his widow might marry again, and has ordered
that in such case she should keep and exercise parental authority over
their children. 12 Again, an instance of a husband's overarching
influence from beyond the grave.
All these indignities and disabilities suffered by
Filipino wives for hundreds of years evoked no protest from them until
the concept of human rights and equality between and among nations and
individuals found hospitable lodgment in the United Nations Charter of
which the Philippines was one of the original signatories. By then, the
Spanish "conquistadores" had been overthrown by the American forces at
the turn of the century. The bedrock of the U.N. Charter was firmly
anchored on this credo: "to reaffirm faith in the fundamental human
rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person, in the equal rights of men and women." (Emphasis supplied)
It took over thirty years before these egalitarian
doctrines bore fruit, owing largely to the burgeoning of the feminist
movement. What may be regarded as the international bill of rights for
women was implanted in the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) adopted by the U.N. General
Assembly which entered into force as an international treaty on
September 3, 1981. In ratifying the instrument, the Philippines bound
itself to implement its liberating spirit and letter, for its
Constitution, no less, declared that "The Philippines. . . adopts the
generally accepted principles of international law as part of the law of
the land and adheres to the policy of peace, equality, justice,
freedom, cooperation, and amity with all nations." 13
One such principle embodied in the CEDAW is granting to men and women
"the same rights with regard to the law relating to the movement of
persons and the freedom to choose their residence and domicile." 14 (Emphasis supplied).
CEDAW's pro-women orientation which was not lost on
Filipino women was reflected in the 1987 Constitution of the Philippines
and later, in the Family Code, 15
both of which were speedily approved by the first lady President of the
country, Corazon C. Aquino. Notable for its emphasis on the human
rights of all individuals and its bias for equality between the sexes
are the following provisions: "The State values the dignity of every
human person and guarantees full respect for human rights" 16
and "The State recognizes the role of women in nation-building, and
shall ensure the fundamental equality before the law of women and men."
17
A major accomplishment of women in their quest for equality with men and the eli
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