Bill of Rights Case Digest
Bill of Rights Case Digest
Bill of Rights Case Digest
CASES
WHO EXERCISES THESE GOVT
POWER
cases:
ERMITA-MALATE HOTEL & MOTEL
OPERATORS ASSOC., INC VS MAYOR OF
MANILA
G.R. No. L-24693
Police Power Due Process Clause
On 13 June 1963, the Manila Municipal Board
enacted Ord 4760 and the same was approved
by then acting mayor Astorga. Ord 4760
sought to regulate hotels and motels. It
classified them into 1st class (taxed at 6k/yr)
and 2nd class (taxed at 4.5k/yr). It also
compelled
hotels/motels
to
get
the
demographics of anyone who checks in to
their rooms. It compelled hotels/motels to
have wide open spaces so as not to conceal
the identity of their patrons. Ermita-Malate
impugned the validity of the law averring that
such is oppressive, arbitrary and against due
process. The lower court as well as the
appellate court ruled in favor of ErmitaMalate.
ISSUE: Whether or not Ord 4760 is against
the due process clause.
HELD: The SC ruled in favor of Astorga.
There is a presumption that the laws enacted
by Congress (in this case Mun Board) is valid.
W/o a showing or a strong foundation of
invalidity, the presumption stays. As in this
case, there was only a stipulation of facts and
such cannot prevail over the presumption.
Further, the ordinance is a valid exercise of
Police Power. There is no question but that the
challenged ordinance was precisely enacted
to minimize certain practices hurtful to public
morals. This is to minimize prostitution. The
increase in taxes not only discourages
hotels/motels in doing any business other than
legal but also increases the revenue of the lgu
concerned. And taxation is a valid exercise of
government
action
adhering
to
the
established process when it makes an
intrusion into the private sphere. Examples
range from the form of notice given to the
level of formality of a hearing.
Substantive Due Process: Substantive due
process completes the protection envisioned
by the due process clause. It inquires whether
the government has sufficient justification for
depriving a person of life, liberty, or property.
CHURCHILL vs. RAFFERTY,
G.R. NO. L-10572, December 21, 1915 ( 32
Phil 580)
FACTS:
The case arises from the fact that defendant,
Collector of Internal Revenue, would like to
destroy or remove any sign, signboard, or
billboard, the property of the plaintiffs, for the
sole reason that such sign, signboard, or
billboard is, or may be offensive to the sight.
The plaintiffs allege otherwise. Was there
valid exercise of police power in this case?
HELD:
Yes. There can be no doubt that the exercise
of the police power of the Philippine
Government belongs to the Legislature and
that this power is limited only by the Acts of
Congress and those fundamentals principles
which lie at the foundation of all republican
forms of government. An Act of the
Legislature
which
is
obviously
and
undoubtedly foreign to any of the purposes of
the police power and interferes with the
ordinary enjoyment of property would,
without doubt, be held to be invalid. But
where the Act is reasonably within a proper
consideration of and care for the public
health, safety, or comfort, it should not be
disturbed by the courts.
"The power vested in the legislature by the
constitution to make, ordain, and establish all
manner of wholesome and reasonable laws,
statutes, and ordinances, either with penalties
or without, not repugnant to the constitution,
as they shall judge to be for the good and
welfare of the commonwealth, and of the
subjects of the same."
ISSUE:
Whether or not the policy of a pharmaceutical
company prohibiting its employees from
marrying employees of any competitor
company is valid
HELD:
The challenged policy has been implemented
by Glaxo impartially and disinterestedly for a
long period of time. In the case at bar, the
record shows that Glaxo gave Tecson several
chances to eliminate the conflict of interest
brought about by his relationship with Betsy,
but he never availed of any of them.
RULING:
On Equal Protection
cases:
BANCO ESPANOL FILIPINO v. PALANCA
G.R. No. L-11390, March 26, 1918
JURISDICTION,
HOW
ACQUIRED:
Jurisdiction over the property which is the
subject of the litigation may result either from
a seizure of the property under legal process,
whereby it is brought into the actual custody
of the law, or it may result from the institution
of legal proceedings wherein, under special
provisions of law, the power of the court over
the property is recognized and made effective.
The action to foreclose a mortgage is said to
be a proceeding quasi in rem, by which is
expressed the idea that while it is not strictly
speaking an action in rem yet it partakes of
that nature and is substantially such.
DUE
PROCESS
IN
FORECLOSURE
PROCEEDINGS: Property is always assumed
to be in the possession of its owner, in person
or by agent; and he may be safely held, under
certain conditions, to be affected with
knowledge that proceedings have been
instituted for its condemnation and sale.
FACTS:
Engracio Palanca Tanquinyeng y Limquingco
mortgaged various parcels of real property in
Manila
to
El
Banco
Espanol-Filipino.
Afterwards, Engracio returned to China and
there he died on January 29, 1810 without
returning again to the Philippines. The
mortgagor
then
instituted
foreclosure
proceeding but since defendant is a nonresident, it was necessary to give notice by
publication. The Clerk of Court was also
directed to send copy of the summons to the
defendants last known address, which is in
Amoy, China. It is not shown whether the
Clerk complied with this requirement.
Nevertheless,
after
publication
in
a
newspaper of the City of Manila, the cause
proceeded and judgment by default was
rendered. The decision was likewise published
and afterwards sale by public auction was
held with the bank as the highest bidder. On
August 7, 1908, this sale was confirmed by
the court. However, about seven years after
the confirmation of this sale, a motion was
made by Vicente Palanca, as administrator of
the estate of the original defendant, wherein
RULING:
No.
Doctrine
of
incorporation
under
international law, as applied in most
countries, decrees that rules of international
law are given equal standing with, but are not
superior to national legislative acts. Treaty
can repeal statute and statute can repeal
treaty. No conflict. Veil of secrecy is lifted
during trial. Request should impose veil at
any stage.
Judgment: Petition dismissed for lack of merit.
Kapunan, separate concurring opinion: While
the evaluation process conducted by the DOJ
is not exactly a preliminary investigation of
criminal cases, it is akin to a preliminary
investigation because it involves the basic
constitutional rights of the person sought to
be extradited. A person ordered extradited is
arrested, forcibly taken from his house,
separated from his family and delivered to a
foreign state. His rights of abode, to privacy,
liberty and pursuit of happiness are taken
away from hima fate as harsh and cruel as a
conviction of a criminal offense. For this
reason, he is entitled to have access to the
evidence against him and the right to
controvert them.
(2)
Not only must the party be given an
opportunity to present his case and to adduce
evidence tending to establish the rights which
he asserts but the tribunal must consider the
evidence presented.
(3)
While the duty to deliberate does not
impose the obligation to decide right, it does
imply
a
necessity
which
cannot
be
disregarded, namely, that of having something
to support its decision. A decision with
absolutely nothing to support it is a nullity, a
place when directly attached.
(4)
Not only must there be some evidence
to support a finding or conclusion but the
evidence must be substantial. Substantial
evidence is more than a mere scintilla It
means such relevant evidence as a reasonable
mind might accept as adequate to support a
conclusion.
(5)
The decision must be rendered on the
evidence presented at the hearing, or at least
contained in the record and disclosed to the
parties affected.
(6)
The Court of Industrial Relations or any
of its judges, therefore, must act on its or his
own independent consideration of the law and
facts of the controversy, and not simply accept
the views of a subordinate in arriving at a
decision.
(7)
The Court of Industrial Relations
should, in all controversial questions, render
its decision in such a manner that the parties
to the proceeding can know the vario issues
involved, and the reasons for the decisions
rendered. The performance of this duty is
inseparable from the authority conferred upon
it.
MACIAS V. COMELEC
FACTS:
Petitioners are four members of the House of
Representatives
from
Negros
Oriental,
Misamis Oriental and Bulacan, and the
provincial Governor of Negros Oriental. They
are requesting that the respondent officials be
prevented to implement RA 3040, an act that
of
Due
Process:
EO 626-A is unconstitutional
In the instant case, the carabaos were
arbitrarily confiscated by the police station
commander, were returned to the petitioner
only after he had filed a complaint for
recovery and given a supersedeas bond of
P12,000.00, which was ordered confiscated
upon his failure to produce the carabaos when
ordered by the trial court. The executive
order defined the prohibition, convicted the
petitioner
and
immediately
imposed
punishment, which was carried out forthright.
The measure struck at once and pounced
upon the petitioner without giving him a
chance to be heard, thus denying him the
centuries-old guaranty of elementary fair play.
It has already been remarked that there are
occasions when notice and hearing may be
validly dispensed with notwithstanding the
usual requirement for these minimum
guarantees of due process. It is also conceded
that summary action may be validly taken in
administrative proceedings as procedural due
process is not necessarily judicial only. In the
exceptional cases accepted, however, there is
a justification for the omission of the right to a
previous hearing, to wit, the immediacy of the
problem sought to be corrected and the
urgency of the need to correct it.
In the case before us, there was no such
pressure of time or action calling for the
petitioner's
peremptory
treatment.
The
properties involved were not even inimical per
se as to require their instant destruction.
There certainly was no reason why the offense
prohibited by the executive order should not
have been proved first in a court of justice,
with the accused being accorded all the rights
safeguarded to him under the Constitution.
Considering that, as we held in Pesigan v.
Angeles, Executive Order No. 626-A is penal
in nature, the violation thereof should have
been pronounced not by the police only but by
a court of justice, which alone would have had
the authority to impose the prescribed
penalty, and only after trial and conviction of
the accused.
We also mark, on top of all this, the
questionable manner of the disposition of the
YNOT v. IAC
Police Power Not Validly Exercised
There had been an existing law which
prohibited the slaughtering of carabaos (EO
626). To strengthen the law, Marcos issued
EO 626-A which not only banned the
movement of carabaos from interprovinces
but as well as the movement of carabeef. On
13 Jan 1984, Ynot was caught transporting 6
carabaos from Masbate to Iloilo. He was then
charged in violation of EO 626-A. Ynot
averred EO 626-A as unconstitutional for it
violated his right to be heard or his right to
due process. He said that the authority
provided by EO 626-A to outrightly confiscate
carabaos even without being heard is
unconstitutional. The lower court ruled
against Ynot ruling that the EO is a valid
exercise of police power in order to promote
general welfare so as to curb down the
indiscriminate slaughter of carabaos.
ISSUE: Whether or not the law is valid.
HELD: The SC ruled that the EO is not valid
as it indeed violates due process. EO 626-A
ctreated a presumption based on the
judgment of the executive. The movement of
carabaos from one area to the other does not
mean a subsequent slaughter of the same
would ensue. Ynot should be given to defend
himself and explain why the carabaos are
being transferred before they can be
confiscated. The SC
found that the
challenged measure is an invalid exercise of
the police power because the method
employed to conserve the carabaos is not
reasonably necessary to the purpose of the
law and, worse, is unduly oppressive. Due
process is violated because the owner of the
property confiscated is denied the right to be
heard in his defense and is immediately
condemned and punished. The conferment on
the administrative authorities of the power to
adjudge the guilt of the supposed offender is a
clear encroachment on judicial functions and
militates against the doctrine of separation of
powers. There is, finally, also an invalid
delegation of legislative powers to the officers
mentioned therein who are granted unlimited
discretion in the distribution of the properties
arbitrarily taken.
LUPANGO v. CA
FACTS: PRC issued a resolution directing
that no examinee for the CPA Board Exam
shall attend any review class, briefing,
conference or the like conducted by, or shall
receive any hand-out, review material, or any
tip from any school, college or university, or
any review center or the like or any reviewer,
lecturer, instructor official or employee of any
of the aforementioned or similars institutions
during the 3 days immediately proceeding
every examination day including examination
day.
HELD: Such resolution is unreasonable. The
unreasonableness is more obvious in that one
who is caught committing the prohibited acts
even without any ill motives will be barred
from taking future examinations conducted by
the respondent PRC. Furthermore, it is
inconceivable how the Commission can
manage to have a watchful eye on each and
every examinee during the three days before
the examination period.
Administrative authorities should not act
arbitrarily and capriciously in the issuance of
rules and regulations. To be valid, such
rules and regulations must be reasonable
and fairly adapted to the end in view. If
shown to bear no reasonable relation to the
purposes for which they are authorized to be
issued, then they must be held to be invalid.
PRC has no authority to dictate on the
reviewees as to how they should prepare
themselves for the licensure examinations, as
this will infringe n the examinees right to
libery.
Such resolution also violates the academic
freedom of the schools concerned. The
enforcement of Resolution No. 105 is not a
guarantee that the alleged leakages in the
licensure examinations will be eradicated or
at least minimized. What is needed to be done
by the respondent is to find out the source of
such leakages and stop it right there.
BALACUIT v. CFI
FACTS:
ISSUE:
Whether or not accused-appellant should be
allowed to discharge mandate as member of
House of Representatives
RULING:
Election is the expression of the sovereign
power of the people. However, inspite of its
importance, the privileges and rights arising
from having been elected may be enlarged or
restricted by law.
The immunity from arrest or detention of
Senators and members of the House of
Representatives arises from a provision of the
Constitution. The privilege has always been
granted in a restrictive sense. The provision
granting an exemption as a special privilege
cannot be extended beyond the ordinary
meaning of its terms. It may not be extended
by intendment, implication or equitable
considerations.
The accused-appellant has not given any
reason why he should be exempted from the
operation of Sec. 11, Art. VI of the
Constitution. The members of Congress
cannot compel absent members to attend
sessions if the reason for the absence is a
legitimate one. The confinement of a
Congressman
charged
with
a
crime
punishable by imprisonment of more than six
years is not merely authorized by law, it has
constitutional foundations. To allow accusedappellant to attend congressional sessions
and committee meetings for 5 days or more in
a week will virtually make him a free man
with all the privileges appurtenant to his
position. Such an aberrant situation not only
elevates accused-appellants status to that of
a special class, it also would be a mockery of
the purposes of the correction system.
ORMOC SUGAR COMPANY INC. VS
ORMOC CITY ET AL
Equal Protection
FACTS:
In 1964, Ormoc City passed a bill which read:
There shall be paid to the City Treasurer on
any and all productions of centrifugal sugar
ART.
3
Sec.
UNREASONABLE
SEIZURE
2
RIGHTS
SEARCHES
OF
AND
cases:
VALMONTE VS. DE VILLA
FACTS:
On 20 January 1987, the National Capital
Region District Command (NCRDC) was
activated pursuant to Letter of Instruction
02/87 of the Philippine General Headquarters,
AFP, with the mission of conducting security
operations within its area of responsibility and
peripheral areas, for the purpose of
establishing an effective territorial defense,
maintaining peace and order, and providing
an atmosphere conducive to the social,
economic and political development of the
National Capital Region. As part of its duty to
maintain peace and order, the NCRDC
installed checkpoints in various parts of
Valenzuela, Metro Manila. Petitioners aver
that, because of the installation of said
checkpoints, the residents of Valenzuela are
worried of being harassed and of their safety
being placed at the arbitrary, capricious and
whimsical disposition of the military manning
the checkpoints, considering that their cars
and vehicles are being subjected to regular
searches and check-ups, especially at night or
at dawn, without the benefit of a search
warrant and/or court order. Their alleged fear
for their safety increased when, at dawn of 9
July 1988, Benjamin Parpon, a supply officer
of the Municipality of Valenzuela, Bulacan,
was gunned down allegedly in cold blood by
the members of the NCRDC manning the
checkpoint along McArthur Highway at
Malinta, Valenzuela, for ignoring and/or
refusing to submit himself to the checkpoint
and for continuing to speed off inspire of
warning shots fired in the air.
ISSUE:
WON the installation of checkpoints violates
the right of the people against unreasonable
searches and seizures
RULING:
RULING:
1. NO.
2. NO.
3. NO. There is no merit in this contention
because petitioners were given all the
opportunities to be heard.
4. NO.
REASONS:
1. The Court ruled that the DOJ Panel did not
gravely abuse its discretion when it found
probable cause against the petitioners. A
probable cause needs only to rest on evidence
showing that more likely than not, a crime has
been committed and was committed by the
suspects. Probable cause need not be based
on clear and convincing evidence of guilt,
neither on evidence establishing guilt beyond
reasonable doubt and definitely, not on
evidence establishing absolute certainty of
guilt.
2. The Court ruled that respondent judges did
not gravely abuse their discretion. In arrest
cases, there must be a probable cause that a
crime has been committed and that the
person to be arrested committed it. Section 6
of Rule 112 simply provides that upon filing
of an information, the Regional Trial Court
may issue a warrant for the accused. Clearly
the, our laws repudiate the submission of
petitioners that respondent judges should
have conducted searching examination of
witnesses before issuing warrants of arrest
against them.
3. The DOJ Panel precisely ed the parties to
adduce more evidence in their behalf and for
the panel to study the evidence submitted
more fully.
4. Petitioners argument lacks appeal for it
lies on the faulty assumption that the decision
whom to prosecute is a judicial function, the
sole prerogative of the courts and beyond
executive and legislative interference. In
truth, the prosecution of crimes appertains to
the executive department of government
whose principal power and responsibility is to
see that our laws are faithfully executed. A
necessary component of this power is the
right to prosecute their violators (See R.A. No.
6981 and section 9 of Rule 119 for legal
basis).
of
the
incident
then
-Thereafter,
and
for
the
purpose
of
preliminary investigation, the designated
investigator, Harry O. Tantiado, TSg, of the PC
Criminal Investigation Service at Camp
Bagong Ibalon Legazpi City filed an amended
complaint with the Municipal Trial Court of
Masbate accusing, among others, Vicente
Lim, Sr., Mayor Susana Lim of Masbate, Jolly
T. Fernandez, Florencio T. Fernandez, Jr.,
Nonilon A. Bagalihog, Mayor Nestor C. Lim
and Mayor Antonio Kho of the crime of
ISSUE:
Whether or Not the police correctly searched
and seized the drugs from the accused.
RULING:
The following cases are specifically provided
or allowed by law:
1. Warrantless search incidental to a lawful
arrest recognized under Section 12, Rule 126
of the Rules of Court 8 and by prevailing
jurisprudence
2. Seizure of evidence in "plain view," the
elements of which are: (a) a prior valid
intrusion based on the valid warrantless
arrest in which the police are legally present
in the pursuit of their official duties; (b) the
evidence was inadvertently discovered by the
police who had the right to be where they are;
(c) the evidence must be immediately
apparent, and (d) "plain view" justified mere
seizure of evidence without further search;
3. Search of a moving vehicle. Highly
regulated by the government, the vehicle's
inherent mobility reduces expectation of
privacy especially when its transit in public
thoroughfares furnishes a highly reasonable
suspicion amounting to probable cause that
the occupant committed a criminal activity;
4. Consented warrantless search;
5. Customs search;
6. Stop and Frisk;
7. Exigent and Emergency Circumstances.
The essential requisite of probable cause must
still be satisfied before a warrantless search
and seizure can be lawfully conducted.
The accused cannot be said to be committing
a crime, she was merely crossing the street
and was not acting suspiciously for the
Narcom agents to conclude that she was
committing a crime. There was no legal basis
to effect a warrantless arrest of the accuseds
bag, there was no probable cause and the
accused was not lawfully arrested.
The police had more than 24 hours to procure
a search warrant and they did not do so. The
seized marijuana was illegal and inadmissible
evidence.
FACTS:
On 27 August 1990, at about 6:30 p.m.,
allegedly in response to bomb threats
reported seven days earlier, Rodolfo Yu of the
Western Police District, Metropolitan Police
Force of the Integrated National Police, Police
Station No. 3, Quiapo, Manila, was on foot
patrol with three other police officers (all of
SEQUESTRATION
OF
HER
OLOT
RESTHOUSE BY HER ACTIONS IN REGARD
TO THE SAME.
BUT A VOID ORDER
PRODUCES NO EFFECT AND CANNOT BE
VALIDATED UNDER THE DOCTRINE OF
ESTOPPEL. FOR THE SAME REASON, THE
COURT CANNOT ACCEPT PETITIONERS
VIEW THAT MRS. MARCOS SHOULD HAVE
FIRST SOUGHT THE LIFTING OF THE
SEQUESTRATION ORDER THROUGH A
MOTION TO QUASH FILED WITH THE
PCGG. BEING VOID, THE SANDIGANBAYAN
HAS THE POWER TO STRIKE IT DOWN ON
SIGHT.
RULING OF THE COURT:
The Courts Ruling
Under Section 26, Article XVIII of the
Constitution, an order of sequestration may
only issue upon a showing of a prima facie
case that the properties are ill-gotten wealth
under Executive Orders 1 and 2.[2][11] When
a court nullifies an order of sequestration for
having been issued without a prima facie
case, the Court does not substitute its
judgment for that of the PCGG but simply
applies the law.[3][12]
In Bataan Shipyard & Engineering Co, Inc. v.
PCGG,[4][13] the Court held that a prima
facie factual foundation that the properties
sequestered
are ill-gotten
wealth
is
required.
The power to determine the
existence of a prima facie case has been
vested in the PCGG as an incident to its
investigatory powers. The two-commissioner
rule is obviously intended to assure a collegial
determination of such fact.[5][14]
Here, it is clear that the PCGG did not make a
prior determination of the existence of a
prima facie case that would warrant the
sequestration of the Olot Resthouse. The
Republic presented no evidence before the
Sandiganbayan that shows differently. Nor
did the Republic demonstrate that the two
PCGG representatives were given the quasijudicial authority to receive and consider
evidence that would warrant such a prima
facie finding.
18, 1986
the Olot
PADILLA V. CA
129 S 558 (1990)
ISSUE:
Whether or not the substantive right of the
accused for a speedy trial prejudiced during
the hearing of the case.
RULING:
The court ruled that the substantive right of
the accused for a fair and speedy trial was not
violated. It held that the Speedy Trial Act of
1998 provides that the trial period for the
criminal cases should be in general 180 days.
However, in determining the right of an
accused to speedy trial, courts should do
more than a mathematical computation of the
number of postponements of the scheduled
hearings of the case.The right to a speedy
trial is deemed violated only when: (1) the
proceedings are attended by vexatious,
capricious, and oppressive delays; or (2) when
unjustified postponements are asked for and
secured; or (3) when without cause or
justifiable motive a long period of time is
allowed to elapse without the party having his
case tried.
ISSUE:
W/N the warrant of arrest is valid? Can a
court issue a warrant of arrest against an
unknown accused?
cases:
PANGANDAMAN V. CASAR
FACTS:
The case originated in Lanao. The offended
party was ambushed in Lanao, but he
survived. Based on his description, there were
around 50 persons who staged the ambush
HELD:
NO it is not valid. It is of the nature of a
general warrant, one of a call of writs long
prescribed as unconstitutional and once
anathematized as totally subversive of the
liberty of the subject. Clearly violative of the
constitutional injunction that warrants of
arrest should particularly describe the person
or persons to be seized. The warrant as
against
unidentified
subjects
will
be
considered as null and void.
EXAMINATION
DEPOSITS
OF
BANK
ACCOUNTS/