Lidasan v Comelec
G.R. No. L-28089
October 25, 1967
Sanchez, J.:
Facts:
1. Lidasan, a resident and taxpayer of the detached portion of
Parang, Cotabato, and a qualified voter for the 1967 elections assails the constitutionality of RA
4790 and petitioned that Comelec's resolutions
implementing the same for electoral purposes be nullified. Under RA 4790, 12 barrios in
two municipalities in the province of Cotabato are transferred to the
province of Lanao del Sur. This brought about a change in the boundaries of the
two provinces.
2. Barrios Togaig and Madalum are within the
municipality of Buldon in the Province
of Cotabato, and that Bayanga, Langkong, Sarakan, Kat-bo, Digakapan,
Magabo, Tabangao, Tiongko, Colodan and Kabamakawan are parts and parcel of
another municipality, the municipality of Parang,
also in the Province of Cotabato and
not of Lanao del Sur.
3. Apprised
of this development, the Office of the President, recommended to Comelec that the operation of the statute
be suspended until "clarified by correcting legislation."
4. Comelec,
by resolution declared that the statute should be implemented unless
declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court.
ISSUE: Whether or not RA 4790, which is
entitled "An Act Creating the Municipality of Dianaton in the Province of Lanao
del Sur", but which includes barrios located in another province —
Cotabato is unconstitutional for
embracing more than one subject in the title
YES. RA 4790 is null and void
1. The
constitutional provision contains dual limitations upon legislative power. First. Congress is to refrain
from conglomeration, under one statute, of heterogeneous subjects. Second. The title of the bill
is to be couched in a language sufficient to notify the legislators and the
public and those concerned of the import of the single subject thereof. Of
relevance here is the second directive. The subject of the statute must be
"expressed in the title" of the bill. This constitutional requirement
"breathes the spirit of command." Compliance
is imperative, given the fact that the Constitution does not exact of Congress
the obligation to read during its deliberations the entire text of the bill. In
fact, in the case of House Bill 1247, which became RA 4790, only its title was
read from its introduction to its final approval in the House where the bill,
being of local application, originated.
2. The Constitution does not require Congress to employ in the
title of an enactment, language of such precision as to mirror, fully index or
catalogue all the contents and the minute details therein. It suffices if the
title should serve the purpose of the constitutional demand that it inform the
legislators, the persons interested in the subject of the bill, and the public,
of the nature, scope and consequences of the proposed law and its operation.
And this, to lead them to inquire into the body of the bill, study and discuss
the same, take appropriate action thereon, and, thus, prevent surprise or fraud
upon the legislators.
3. The test of the sufficiency of a title is whether or not it
is misleading; and, which technical accuracy is not essential, and the subject
need not be stated in express terms where it is clearly inferable from the
details set forth, a title
which is so uncertain that the average person reading it would not be informed
of the purpose of the enactment or put on inquiry as to its contents, or which
is misleading, either in referring to or indicating one subject where another
or different one is really embraced in the act, or in omitting any expression
or indication of the real subject or scope of the act, is bad.
4. The
title — "An Act Creating the Municipality of Dianaton, in the Province of Lanao del Sur" — projects the impression that only the province of Lanao del Sur is affected by the creation of Dianaton. Not the
slightest intimation is there that communities in the adjacent province of
Cotabato are incorporated in this new Lanao del Sur town. The phrase "in
the Province of Lanao del Sur," read without subtlety or contortion, makes
the title misleading, deceptive. For, the known fact is that the legislation
has a two-pronged purpose combined in one statute: (1) it creates the
municipality of Dianaton purportedly from twenty-one barrios in the towns of
Butig and Balabagan, both in the province of Lanao del Sur; and (2) it also
dismembers two municipalities in Cotabato, a province different from Lanao del
Sur.
5. Finally, the
title did not inform the members of Congress the full impact of the law. One, it did not apprise the people in the towns of Buldon and Parang in Cotabato and
in the province of Cotabato itself that part of their territory is being taken
away from their towns and province and added to the adjacent Province of Lanao
del Sur. Two, it kept the public in the dark as to what towns and provinces were
actually affected by the bill.
Thank you!
ReplyDeleteHi Mela! You're welcome. Please visit us back in the future. Good luck!
Deletethank you! Very clear but comprehensive CAse Digest.
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