Luis A. Asistio V. Hon. Thelma Canlas Trinidad-Pe Aguirre, G.R. No. 191124, April 27, 2010, J. NACHURA
Luis A. Asistio V. Hon. Thelma Canlas Trinidad-Pe Aguirre, G.R. No. 191124, April 27, 2010, J. NACHURA
Luis A. Asistio V. Hon. Thelma Canlas Trinidad-Pe Aguirre, G.R. No. 191124, April 27, 2010, J. NACHURA
191124,
April 27, 2010, J. NACHURA
Domicile denotes a fixed permanent residence where, when absent for business or pleasure,
or for like reasons, one intends to return. In the consideration of circumstances obtaining in
each particular case, three rules must be borne in mind, namely: (1) that a person must
have a residence or domicile somewhere; (2) once established, it remains until a new one is
acquired; and (3) that a person can have but one residence or domicile at a time.
FACTS:
On January 26, 2010, private respondent Enrico R. Echiverri filed against petitioner
Luis A. Asistio a Petition for Exclusion of Voter from the Permanent List of Voters of Caloocan
City. In his petition, Echiverri alleged that Asistio is not a resident of Caloocan City,
specifically not of 123 Interior P. Zamora St., Barangay 15, Caloocan City, the address stated
in his Certificate of Candidacy (COC) for Mayor in the 2010 Automated National and Local
Elections. According to Echiverri, he found out that Asistios address is non-existent. To
support this, Echiverri attached to his petition a Certification dated December 29, 2009
issued by the Tanggapan ng Punong Barangay of Barangay 15 Central, Zone 2, District II of
Caloocan City. He mentioned that, upon verification of the 2009 Computerized Voters List
(CVL) for Barangay 15, Asistios name appeared under voter number 8, with address at 109
Libis Gochuico, Barangay 15, Caloocan City.
Echiverri also claimed that Asistio was no longer residing in this address, since what
appeared in the latters COC for Mayor in the 2007 elections was No. 110 Unit 1, P. Zamora
St., Barangay 15, Caloocan City, but that the address used in Asistios current COC is situated
in Barangay 17. He said that, per his verification, the voters duly registered in the 2009 CVL
using the address No. 123 P. Zamora St., Barangay 17, Caloocan City did not include
Asistio. In defense, Asistio alleged that he is a resident of No. 116, P. Zamora St., Caloocan
City, and a registered voter of Precinct No. 1811A because he mistakenly relied on the
address stated in the contract of lease with Angelina dela Torre Tengco which was 123
Interior P. Zamora St., Barangay 15, Caloocan City
The respondent court ruled in favor of Echiverri. Hence, this petition. On March, 8,
2010, Echiverri filed his Comment to the Petition (with Motion to Quash Status Quo Ante
Order). Departing from Echiverris position against the Petition, the Office of the Solicitor
General (OSG), on March 30, 2010, filed its Comment via registered mail. The OSG points out
that Asistios family is known to be one of the prominent political families in Caloocan City,
and that there is no indication whatsoever that Asistio has ever intended to abandon his
domicile, Caloocan City. Further, the OSG proposes that the issue at hand is better resolved
by the people of Caloocan City. In all, the OSG propounds that technicalities and procedural
niceties should bow to the sovereign will of the people of Caloocan City.
ISSUE:
Whether Asistio should be excluded from the permanent list of voters of [Precinct 1811A]
of Caloocan City for failure to comply with the residency required by law?
RULING:
No.
The residency requirement of a voter is at least one (1) year residence in
the Philippines and at least six (6) months in the place where the person proposes or intends
to vote. Residence, as used in the law prescribing the qualifications for suffrage and for
elective office, is doctrinally settled to mean domicile, importing not only an intention to
reside in a fixed place but also personal presence in that place, coupled with conduct
indicative of such intention inferable from a persons acts, activities, and
utterances. Domicile denotes a fixed permanent residence where, when absent for business
or pleasure, or for like reasons, one intends to return. In the consideration of circumstances
obtaining in each particular case, three rules must be borne in mind, namely: (1) that a
person must have a residence or domicile somewhere; (2) once established, it remains until
a new one is acquired; and (3) that a person can have but one residence or domicile at a
time.
Domicile is not easily lost. To successfully effect a transfer thereof, one must
demonstrate: (1) an actual removal or 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 that purpose. There must be animus manendi coupled with animus non
revertendi. The purpose to remain in or at the domicile of choice must be for an indefinite
period of time; the change of residence must be voluntary; and the residence at the place
chosen for the new domicile must be actual.
Asistio has always been a resident of Caloocan City since his birth or for more than
72 years. His family is known to be among the prominent political families in Caloocan City.
In fact, Asistio served in public office as Caloocan City Second District representative in the
House of Representatives, having been elected as such in the 1992, 1995, 1998, and 2004
elections. In 2007, he also sought election as City Mayor. In all of these occasions, Asistio
cast his vote in the same city. Taking these circumstances into consideration, gauged in the
light of the doctrines above enunciated, it cannot be denied that Asistio has qualified, and
continues to qualify, as a voter of Caloocan City. There is no showing that he has established
domicile elsewhere, or that he had consciously and voluntarily abandoned his residence
in Caloocan City. He should, therefore, remain in the list of permanent registered voters of
Precinct No. 1811A, Barangay 15, Caloocan City.
That Asistio allegedly indicated in his Certificate of Candidacy for Mayor, both for the
2007 and 2010 elections, a non-existent or false address, or that he could not be physically
found in the address he indicated when he registered as a voter, should not operate to
exclude him as a voter of Caloocan City. These purported misrepresentations in Asistios COC,
if true, might serve as basis for an election offense under the Omnibus Election Code
(OEC), or an action to deny due course to the COC. But to our mind, they do not serve as
proof that Asistio has abandoned his domicile in Caloocan City, or that he has established
residence outside of Caloocan City.