Statcon Reviewer
Statcon Reviewer
Statcon Reviewer
IN GENERAL
LAW
a. Jural and generic sense: refers to the
whole body or system of law; applicable to
all actions/aspects of creation
b. Jural and concrete sense: law means a rule
of conduct (how we must behave)
formulated (conscious effort) and made
obligatory (no option but follow) by
legitimate power of the state (experience
of presidential decrees)
It includes:
a. Statutes enacted by the legislature
b. Presidential decrees and executive orders
issued by the President
c. Other presidential issuances
d. Rulings of the Supreme Court construing
the law, rules and regulations
promulgated by administrative or
executive offices pursuant to a delegated
power
e. Ordinances passed by sanggunians of LGU
STATUTE
An act of the legislature as an organized body,
expressed in the form, and passed according to
the procedure, required to constitute it as part of
the law of the land.
Statutes enacted by the legislature are those
passed by:
a. The Philippine Commission
b. The Philippine Legislature
c. The Batasang Pambansa
d. The Congress of the Philippines
Presidential decrees issued by the President in
the exercise of his legislative power during the
period of martial law under the 1973 Constitution
Executive orders issued by the President in the
exercise of his legislative power during the
revolutionary period under the Freedom
Constitution.
CLASSIFICATION OF STATUTES according to
a. Subject matter (depends on substance
rather than on form)
PUBLIC STATUTE one which affects the
public at large or the whole community
PRIVATE STATUTE one which applies only
to a specific person or subject
b. Scope
General law one which applies to the
whole state and operates throughout the
state alike upon all the people or all of a
class
c. Duration
PERMANENT STATUTE one whose
operation is not limited in duration but
continues until repealed
OF STATUTES
Preamble
Title of Statute
Enacting clause
Purview or body of statute
Separability clause
Repealing Clause
Effectivity Clause
PREAMBLE
-A prefatory statement or explanation or a finding
of facts, reciting the purpose, reason, or occasion
for making the law to which it is prefixed
-Usually found after the enacting clause and
before the body of the law
-The legislature seldom puts a preamble to a
statute it enacts into law
Reason: the statement embodying the purpose,
reason, or occasion for the enactment of the law
is contained in its explanatory note
-Plays an important role in the construction of
PDs
TITLE OF STATUTE
SECTION 26(1) OF ARTICLE 6
EVERY BILL PASSED BY CONGRESS SHALL
EMBRACE ONLY ONE SUBJECT WHICH SHALL BE
EXPRESSED IN THE TITLE THEREOF.
This provision is mandatory, and a law enacted in
violation thereof is unconstitutional.
Limitations:
a. The legislature is to refrain from
conglomeration, under one statute, of
heterogeneous subjects.
b. 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.
Principal purpose of title requirement: to apprise
the legislators of the object, nature and scope of
the provisions of the bill, and to prevent the
enactment into law of matters which have not
received the notice, action and study of the
legislators
Aims of the requirement:
a. To prevent hodgepodge or log-rolling
legislation
b. To prevent surprise or fraud upon the
legislature, by means of provisions in bills
of which the title gave no information, and
which might therefore be overlooked and
carelessly and unintentionally adopted
c. To fairly apprise the people, through such
publication of legislative proceedings
d. The title of a statute is used as a guide in
ascertaining legislative intent when the
language of the act does not clearly
express its purpose
ONE TITLE-ONE SUBJECT rule
-does not require the Congress to employ in the
title of the enactment, language of such precision
as to mirror, fully index or catalogue all the
contents and the minute details therein
-the rule is sufficiently complied with if the title is
comprehensive enough as to include the general
object which the statute seeks to effect, and
where the persons interested are informed or the
nature, scope and consequences of the proposed
law and its operation
How requirement of title construed:
-the title of a bill should be liberally construed; it
should not be given a technical interpretation;
nor should it be so narrowly construed as to
cripple or impede the power of legislation
-provisions (though not expressed in the title) are
germane to the subject matter
Subject of repeal of statute:
-the repeal of a statute on a given subject is
properly connected with the subject matter of a
new statute on the same subject
-repealing section in the new statute is valid
When requirement not applicable:
It does not apply to laws in force and existing at
the time the 1935 Constitution took effect
REPEALING CLAUSE
The repeal is not a legislative declaration finding
the earlier law unconstitutional. This power is
with the courts, not with the legislature.
a. Total repeal rendered revoked
completely
b. Partial repeal leaves the unaffected
portions in force
c. Express repeal a declaration in a statute,
usually in its repealing clause, that a
particular and specific law, identified by its
number of title, is repealed
d. Implied repeal an irreconcilable and
inconsistency exist in the terms of new
and old laws
EFFECTIVITY CLAUSE
The provision when the law take effect
Usually, it shall take effect 15 days from
publication in the Official Gazette or in a
newspaper of general circulation
ARTICLE 2 OF CIVIL CODE
LAWS SHALL TAKE EFFECT AFTE FIFTEEN DAYS
FOLLOWING THE COMPLETION OF THEIR
PUBLICATION EITHER IN THE OFFICIAL GAZETTE
OR IN A NEWSPAPER OF GENERAL CIRCULATION,
UNLESS OTHERWISE PROVIDED.
MUNICIPAL ORDINANCE
Power to enact municipal ordinance:
SBayan
Affirmative vote of a majority of the
members of SB present and voting, there
being a quorum, shall be necessary for the
passage of any ordinance
Ordinance submitted to the municipal
mayor
o Return: within 10 days either with
is approval or veto
o Does not return: shall be deemed
approved
o Two-thirds vote of all members to
override veto
Approved: submitted to SPanlalawigan for
review
SP within 30 days from receipt invalidate
ordinance in whole or in part, and his
action shall be final
SP does not take action within 30 days,
ordinance shall be presumed consisting
with law and valid
CITY ORDINANCE
- Power to pass city ordinance: SPanlungsod
- Affirmate vote of a majority of the
members present and there being a
quorum, shall be necessary for the
passage of any ordinance
- Submit to city mayor: within 10 days, shall
return it with his approval or veto; if he
does not return it, it shall be deemed
approved
- Approved: submitted to SPanlalawigan for
review which shall take action within 30
days, otherwise, it will be deemed valid
PROVINCIAL ORDINANCE
- Legislative body: SPanlalawigan
- Forwarded to Governor who, within 15
days from receipt, shall return it with his
approval or veto; if he does not return it, it
shall be deemed approved
- May be repassed by SPanlalawigan by a
two-thirds vote of all its members
PRESIDENTIAL ISSUANCES
ISSUANCES Those which the President issues in
the exercise of his ordinance power
LIMITED
TO
ORDINANC
E POWER
LEGAL
BASIS
EXECUTIVE
POWER
LEGAL
BASIS
Executive Power
Administrative Order
Proclamations
Memorandum Order
Memorandum Circular
General or Special Order
Right of the President to run the
executive branch and issue orders
Chap 2, Book III, EO 292 (Adm Code
of 1987) Ordinance Power
Authority to execute or implement
laws
Sec 17, Art VII, 1987 Constitution
The President shall have control of
all the executive departments,
bureaus, and offices. He shall
ensure that the laws be faithfully
executed.
CASES
FACTS: On Feb 24, 2006 PGMA
issued:
1. PP1017 commanding AFP to
maintain law and order and
to enforce obedience to all
laws and decrees
promulgated by me personally
or upon my direction, and
declaring State of National
Emergency;
2. GO No. 5 calling upon AFP
BASIS
PURPOSE
INTERDEPENDEN
CE
NON-DELEGATION OF POWERS
RULE
Potestas delegata non delegari
potest
BASIS
Such delegated power constitutes
not only a right but a duty to be
performed by the delegate through
the instrumentality of his own
judgment and not through the
intervening mind of another
VIOLATION
Further delegation constitutes
negation of duty
KMU vs.
FACTS: LTFRB issued Circular
Garcia
allowing provincial bus operators to
239 scra
increase or decrease prescribed
386
fare without first having filed
petition for the purpose and
without benefit of public hearing.
By virtue thereof, PBOAP
announced fare increase. KMU
opposed the move and assailed the
Circular as unconstitutional.
HELD: Congress delegated to
LTFRB the power of fixing rates of
public services under EO 202.
Nowhere under said law is
LTFRB authorized to delegate
that power to transport
operators. The authority given by
LTFRB to provincial bus operators
to set fare range is tantamount to
an undue delegation of
legislative authority.
PERMISSIBLE
Delegation
of tariff
powers to
the
President
Delegation
of
emergency
powers to
the
President
Delegation
to the
DELEGATION
Sec 28(2) Art VI: Congress may by
law authorize the President to fix
within specified limits, and subject
to such limitations and restrictions
as it may impose, tariff rates,
import and export quotas, tonnage
and wharfage dues, and other
duties or imposts
Sec 23(2) Art VI: In times of war or
other national emergency,
Congress may by law authorize the
President, for a limited period and
subject to such restrictions as it
may prescribe, to exercise powers
necessary and proper to carry out
a declared national policy.
Sec 2 Art XVII: Amendments to this
Constitution may likewise be
people at
large
Delegation
to local
government
s
Delegation
to
administrati
ve bodies
VALIDITY OF
EXERCISE
1. Completeness test
2. Sufficient standard test
Does it conform with:
1. What the statute provides
2. Whether the same is
reasonable
TESTS OF DELEGATION
1. COMPLETEN
Statute is complete in all its
ESS TEST
essential terms and conditions
when it leaves legislature so
that there will be nothing left
for delegate to do when it
reaches him except to enforce
it
US vs. Ang Tang
FACTS: Act authorized
Ho
Governor-General to
43 Phil 1
promulgate rules whenever,
for any cause, conditions arise,
resulting in extraordinary rise
in price of palay, rice or corn.
He issued an EO fixing price of
rice. Ang Tang Ho was charged
for selling rice price greater
than that fixed by EO.
HELD: Legislature did not
specify under what
conditions the rules may be
issued and did not define
what constitutes
extraordinary increase in
price of cereals. Promulgation
delegation of
authority)
INTERPRETATIVE
(interpretation of
statute being
administered)
CONTINGENT
HELD: In including
commissions in the
computation of 13th month
pay, DOLE unduly expanded
the concept of basic salary
as defined in PD 851. It is a
fundamental rule that
implementing rules cannot
add or detract from the
provisions of the law it is
designed to implement.
LIMITATIONS ON RULE-MAKING POWER
4. Cannot
They must be within the
exceed
scope and purview of the
provisions of
statutory authority granted
basic law
by the legislature
United BFHA vs.
FACTS
BF Homes
310 scra 304
Lagcao vs.
Labra
E. VALIDITY OF STATUTE
PRESUMPTION OF CONSTITUTIONALITY
Every statute is presumed valid.
Reason: How a law is enacted.
It is but a decent respect due to the
wisdom, integrity and the patriotism of the
legislature, by which the law is passed,
and the Chief Executive, by whom the law
is approved, to presume of its
constitutionality.
To declare a law unconstitutional, the repugnancy
of the law to the Constitution must be clear and
unequivocal. (not a doubtful and argumentative
implication)
All reasonable doubts should be resolved in favor
of the constitutionality of law. To doubt is to
sustain.
The final authority to declare a law
unconstitutional is the Supreme Court en banc by
the concurrence of a majority of the Members
CITIZEN
a. If he can establish that he has suffered
some actual or threatened injury as a
result of the allegedly illegal conduct of
government
b. The injury is fairly traceable to the
challenged action
c. The injury is likely to be redressed by a
favorable action
TAXPAYER
a. When public funds have been illegally
disbursed (illegal expenditure of money)
b. That he will sustain a direct injury as a
result of the enforcement of the
questioned statute.
Based on the theory that the expenditure
of public funds by an offices of the state
for the purpose of administering an
unconstitutional act constitutes a
misapplication of such funds
LEGISLATOR
Allowed to sue to question the validity of
any official action which he claims
infringes his prerogatives as a legislator
The Supreme Court may, in its discretion, take
cognizance of a suit which does not satisfy the
requirements of legal standing. In a few cases,
the Court has adopted a liberal attitude on the
locus standi. The Court may brush aside
technicalities of procedure when the issues raised
are of paramount importance (transcendental
significance) to the public.
WHEN TO RAISE CONSTITUTIONALITY
The question of constitutionality must be raised
at the earliest opportunity, so that if not raised by
the pleadings, ordinarily it may not be raised in
the trial court, and if not raised in the trial court,
it will not be considered on appeal.
Exception:
a. The question may be raised in a motion
for reconsideration or new trial in the
lower court, where the statute to be
invalidated was not existing when the
complaint was filed/during the trial.
b. Criminal case any stage of the
proceedings or on appeal
c. Civil cases where it appears clearly that
a determination of the question is
necessary to a decision and in cases
where it involves the jurisdiction of the
court below
Constitutional questions will not be entertained
by courts unless they are specifically raised,
insisted upon, and adequately argued.
NECESSITY OF DECIDING CONSTITUTIONALITY
ON
REASON
POWER TO
DECLARE
of validity
Legislature has decided law to be
constitutional
President convinced of the
validity of the law
Art VIII, Sec 4(2) All cases
involving the constitutionality of
a law, which shall be heard by the
Supreme Court en banc, shall be
decided with the concurrence of a
majority of the Members who
actually took part in the
deliberations on the issues in the
case and acted thereon.
REQUISITES OF JUDICIAL
There must be an
actual case or
controversy
The question of
constitutionality must
be raised by the
proper party (locus
standi)
The constitutional
question must be
raised at the earliest
possible opportunity
The decision of the
constitutional question
must be necessary to
the determination of
the case itself (lis
mota cause of the
suit
INQUIRY
Involves opposing legal
claims capable of
judicial resolution
One who has sustained
or is in danger of
sustaining an injury as
a result of the act
complained of.
Constitutional question
must be raised at the
first possible instance
If case can be decided
on other grounds,
courts will refrain from
ruling on
constitutionality.
ACTUAL CASE
JUSTICIABLE Involving a conflict of legal rights,
CONTROVE
an assertion of opposite legal
RSY
claims
susceptible of judiciable resolution
on the basis of existing law and
jurisprudence
POLITICAL
Concerned with issues dependent
QUESTION
upon wisdom, not legality, of an
act or measure being assailed
JUDICIAL
Limited to actual controversies
POWER
Involving rights which are
Legally demandable and
enforceable
EXPANDED
Art VIII, Sec 1, 1987 Constitution
JURISDICTIO and to determine whether or not
N
there has been a grave abuse of
discretion amounting to lack or
excess of jurisdiction on the part
on any branch or instrumentality of
the government.
PROPER PARTY
LEGAL
Personal and substantial interest
STANDING
in the case such that the party
has sustained or will sustain direct
injury as a result of the
governmental act that is being
challenged.
TAXPAYERS
Proper when public funds are:
SUIT
a. Illegally disbursed
b. Depleted to improper
purpose
c. Wasted through invalid or
unconstitutional law
MEMBER OF
May question validity of:
CONGRESS
a. Presidential veto
b. Condition imposed in
appropriations bill
c. AO as an usurpation of
legislative power
EXCEPTIONS
a. Over-breadth doctrine
b. Third-party standing
c. Transcendental
significance
PROPER PARTY
CASE 1
FACTS: Pres. Joseph Estrada,
invoking his Commander-in-Chief
IBP vs.
powers, directed the deployment
ZAMORA
of Marines to assist PNP in
338 scra 81 suppressing lawless violence. IBP,
asserting itself as bound with the
duty to uphold the rule of law and
the Constitution, filed petition to
declare such move
unconstitutional, arguing that no
emergency situation obtains in
Manila as would justify deployment
of soldiers for law enforcement.
OSG contends that IBP has no legal
standing.
CASE 2
Oposa vs.
Factoran
GR No.
101083
July 30,
1993
CASE 3
Cuyegkeng
vs. Cruz
GR No. L16263
July 26,
1960
CASE 4
Kilosbayan
vs. Morato
GR No.
118910
July 17,
1995
intergenerational responsibility.
Their right to healthy environment
carried with it obligation to
preserve that environment for
succeeding generations. The
children have legal standing to sue
on behalf of future generations.
FACTS: Dr. Jose Cuyegkeng, et. al.
filed quo warranto proceedings
alleging that their names appear in
a list submitted to the President by
PMA for appointment as members
of the Board of Medical Examiners,
and that Dr. Pedro Cruz whom the
President appointed to said board
was not in the said list. They
contend that pursuant to Medical
Act of 1999, President cannot
appoint to said position any person
not included in the list submitted
by PMA.
HELD: Cuyegkeng, et. al. had not
made a claim to the position held
by Cruz and therefore could not be
regarded as a proper party who
had sustained an injury as a result
of the questioned act.
FACTS: PCSO signed an Equipment
Lease Agreement (ELA) for on-line
lottery. Kilosbayan seeks to declare
the agreement invalid on the
ground that it is substantially the
same as the ELA entered into by
PCSO which was nullified earlier by
the Court.
HELD: Not being parties to the
contract of lease which it seek to
nullify, Kilosbayan has no personal
and substantial interest likely to be
injured by the enforcement of the
contract. It has neither standing to
bring this suit nor substantial
interest to make it real party in
interest.
EARLIEST OPPORTUNITY
GENERAL
If not raised in pleadings cannot
RULE
be considered at trial
If not considered at trial cannot
be considered on appeal
EXCEPTION
CASE 1
Ocampo vs.
Sec of
Justice
GR No. L7918
Jan 18,
1955
Norton v.
Shelby
118 US 425
CASE 2
Manila
Motors v.
Flores
99Phil 738
CASE 3
Fernandez v.
Cuerva
21 scra 195