Arroyo Vs Delima
Arroyo Vs Delima
Arroyo Vs Delima
De
Lima, in her capacity as Secretary of the Department of
Justice and Ricardo A. David, Jr., in his capacity as
Commissioner of the Bureau of Immigration, Respondents
G.R. 199034,
And
I. STATEMENT OF FACTS
___________________________
1 http://www.gov.ph/2011/11/15/gloria-macapagal-arroyo-v-de-lima-et-
al-g-r-no-199034jose-miguel-arroyo-v-de-lima-et-al-g-r-no-199046/
last visited: March 8, 2017
1
The TRO was subject to three conditions, namely: (i) The
petitioners shall post a cash bond of Two Million Pesos
(P2,000,000.00) payable to this Court within five (5) days from notice
hereof. Failure to post the bond within the aforesaid period will result
in the automatic lifting of the temporary restraining order; (ii) The
petitioners shall appoint a legal representative common to both of
them who will receive subpoena, orders and other legal processes on
their behalf during their absence. The petitioners shall submit the
name of the legal representative, also within five (5) days from notice
hereof; and (iii) If there is a Philippine embassy or consulate in the
place where they will be traveling, the petitioners shall inform said
embassy or consulate by personal appearance or by phone of their
whereabouts at all times.
2
The justice who shifted his vote from the first majority to the
second majority agreed with the observations of Justice Carpio with
respect to the defect of the SPA and noted that it was a jurisdictional
defect. The pivotal justice who shifted his vote, added that, anyway,
the defect could easily be remedied by petitioners who in 10 minutes
could simply amend the SPA to reflect condition (ii).
After the discussion, the Court, voting 7-6, ruled that petitioners
had failed to comply with the second condition imposed by the 15
November 2011 Resolution for the issuance of a TRO.
Acting on the Special Civil Actions for Certiorari and Prohibition with
Prayer for the Issuance of a Temporary Restraining Order and/or Writ of
Preliminary Injunction, and mindful of the underlying issues in the cases
the right to life (which is the highest right under the Constitution) and its
supporting rights, including the right to travel
3
III. ISSUES
Among the more important issues resolved by the Court during the special
en banc session were as follows:
2. Was there compliance with the 2nd condition of the TRO? If there is
none, should the TRO be suspended in the meantime?
IV. RULINGS
4
When out of the countrys jurisdiction, by being corporeally
absent therefrom, public respondents legal remedies against petitioners
will be subject to the jurisdiction and the pleasure of the various
countries where they will flee. Out of the countries that had been
mentioned by petitioners to be subject of her medical tour, only two (2)
of the countries cited have extradition treaties with the Philippines. It
still needs verification whether the extradition with Spain has already
been rendered effective through concurrence to the same by the Senate.
The moment she flies out of Philippine air space, our countrys
ability to enforce its laws will now be subject to the wishes of a foreign
government. A PhP2 Million Peso bond is crumbs for one who, if
proven, has actually obtained multiples more from the countrys
coffers. Neither will the appointment of a substitute replace the
effective justice that can be enforced only when a State has physical
custody of a person who has been proven guilty of violation of the state
laws. A conviction against her may lie as a formal judgment, but there
may effectively be no service of sentence. That is of course, all
premised on the theory that petitioners may ultimately be convicted for
one of the crimes for which they are charged. That result can only add
to the very long saga of our peoples desperate attempts to try to
redeem its self-respect by showing to the world that contrary to the
common observation of outsiders, impunity is not allowed to reign in
this country. Should the Court contribute to such possible despair by
not waiting for the oral argument on 22 November 2011 before issuing
a TRO?
5
On Issue No. 2, NO, there was no compliance with the 2nd
condition of the TRO; hence, YES, the TRO should be suspended in the
meantime.
The Court voted 76 (1) that there was no compliance with the
2nd condition of the TRO. But it nonetheless voted by the same 7-6
margin (2) that there was no need to explicitly state the legal effect on
the TRO of the noncompliance by petitioners with the 2ndcondition.
6
5. To deposit and withdraw any money for the purpose of any
proceeding;
6. To obtain copies of documents and papers; and
7. Generally to do all other lawful acts necessary for the
conduct of the said case. (Emphasis supplied.)
7
While the Court will not hesitate to protect former President
Arroyo from the adverse effect of her own act whose validity she
now denounces in order to protect her constitutional right, the
minimum requirement of fairness demands that the government must
be heard on the matter for two important reasons.
8
Thus, the acts which petitioner claims to have violated her
constitutional rights are the acts of her alter ego, and consequently, her
own.
9
whether to issue a temporary restraining order immediately upon the
conclusion of the oral arguments.
__________________________
2 http://www.gov.ph/2011/11/15/gloria-macapagal-arroyo-v-de-lima-et-
al-g-r-no-199034jose-miguel-arroyo-v-de-lima-et-al-g-r-no-199046/
10
issued not because of the supposed infringement on Mr. Arroyos right
to travel but because of the DOJs clear deviation from the provisions
of Department Circular No. 41. Under Section 2 of the Circular, it is
only in the following instances that a Watchlist Order can be issued
___________________________
3 http://www.gov.ph/2011/11/15/gloria-macapagal-arroyo-v-de-lima-et-
al-g-r-no-199034jose-miguel-arroyo-v-de-lima-et-al-g-r-no-199046/
against any person: (a) there is a criminal case pending against him
before any court within this jurisdiction; (b) there is a criminal case
against him pending preliminary investigation, petition for review or
motion for reconsideration before the DOJ or any of its prosecution
offices; and (c) the Secretary of Justice deems it proper motu proprio
or upon the request submitted by any government agency,
commission, task force or similar offices created by the Office of the
President under Republic Act No. 9208 in connection with an
investigation it is conducting and/or in the interest of national security,
public safety or public health. Evidently, that there was a restraint on
Mr. Arroyos right to travel per se is insufficient to overcome the
presumption of constitutionality against the Circular such that what
moved the Court to rule in Mr. Arroyos favor was the dubiety of
whether an investigation conducted by the Senate may be a ground to
issue a Watchlist Order.
On the other hand, if it was the petitioners right to life and the
threat posed thereto by the assailed issuances that was foremost in the
majoritys mind when they decided to issue the TRO, there would
have been no basis to issue a TRO in Mr. Arroyos favor as there is
nothing in his Petition where it was alleged that his right to life was
being threatened or endangered. In his earlier Petition, Mr. Arroyo
was invoking for his right to travel in his earlier Petition. It is no
different in this present Petition; only that, the Watchlist Order he is
now attacking as unconstitutional is based on his being preliminarily
investigated by the DOJ-COMELEC Fact Finding Committee.
However, the issuance of a Watchlist Order on this ground is allowed
11
under the Circular; thus, the basis for the Courts issuance of a TRO in
Mr. Arroyos first Petition does not exist in this case. If the
infringement of his right to travel was not enough for this Court to
issue a TRO in Mr. Arroyos first Petition, it is certainly confounding
as to why it is different in this case.
IN VIEW THEREOF, I vote to: (a) defer action on the prayer for
a TRO; (b) order the public respondents to Comment on the
consolidated Petitions on or before November 21, 2011; and (c) set the
case for oral arguments on November 22, 2011 at 2:00 p.m.; and (d)
immediately after the conduct and conclusion of the oral arguments,
resolve the issue of whether or not a temporary restraining order may
be issued.
12
When this matter was called this morning, it was clear that not
one among the members of this Court was suggesting that petitioners
have no constitutional rights that this Court must vigilantly protect.
No one was saying that petitioners should not be granted any remedy.
The bone of contention before the Court was, simply, whether to
allow public respondents their right to due process by giving them the
right to comment on the petition within a non-extendible period of
five (5) days immediately after which oral arguments were to be heard
and the
___________________________
4 http://www.gov.ph/2011/11/15/gloria-macapagal-arroyo-v-de-lima-et-
al-g-r-no-199034jose-miguel-arroyo-v-de-lima-et-al-g-r-no-199046/
13
expressed her intention to participate in two conferences abroad
during her supposed medical tour. It seems incongruous for petitioner
who has asked the Department of Justice and this Court to look with
humanitarian concern on her precarious state of health, to commit
herself to attend these meetings and conferences at the risk of
worsening her physical condition.
The court must face the risk of flight for it cannot evade the
question that is uppermost in the minds of many if the request for
TRO by petitioner is her desire to evade the investigatory and judicial
process regarding their liability for certain alleged criminal acts. If the
risk of flight is high, then this Court must adopt either of the following
approaches: (1) deny the right to travel, or (2) allow travel subject to
certain restrictions.
14
The majority is completely bereft, however, of any explanation
on why it will protect those rights through a premature TRO in the
face of untruthful statements in the Petitions herein and when its own
practice in its backyard is one of curtailment of judicial employees
own rights to travel. The only proposition that the minority has posed
in todays session is that the State first be heard before any decision to
grant a TRO is reached. Surely, that is fully conformable with the
requirements of the Rules of Court before a TRO can be issued.
15
was not made to apply to condition (ii), implying that non-compliance
with the requirement on the appointment of the legal representative
will not result in the lifting of the TRO. The matter of whether or not
condition (ii) constitutes a condition precedent or a subsequent
condition, is now really of little moment. The important consideration
is that non-compliance with condition (ii) would not, under the very
terms of the enabling Resolution or the TRO itself, result in the
automatic lifting of the restraining order thus granted.
_____________________________
5 http://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/jurisprudence/resolutions/2011/december20
11/199034_velasco.htm
16
On November 29, 2011, the Court En Banc voted anew on the
same issue of the non-suspension of the TRO pending compliance with
the second condition and again, by a vote of 7 against 6, the Court held
that the TRO was not suspended. The majority sustained the correctness
and validity of the November 22, 2011 Resolution. This should put the
issue to rest.
______________________________
6 https://www.scribd.com/document/77632912/Brion-Separate-Opinion
On November 15, 2011, the Court issued a Temporary
Restraining Order (TRO) in favor of the petitioners. In the special En
Banc meeting of November 18, 2011, Justice Antonio T. Carpio
brought to the attention of the Court the petitioners failure to comply
with the second condition, specifically with the appointment of a legal
representative with full authority to receive summons and other court
process during their absence. The legal representative was merely
capacitated to produce, not receive summons. As a result of the
observation, the Court issued another Resolution stating that
xxxx
The first was the question of whether indeed there had been
failure to comply. The second was the effect of this failure if there had
been such a failure.
17
I voted in the negative on the first question in light of the
terms of the TRO. While the compliance with the second condition
might have been lacking on November 18, 2011, to conclude that total
failure had taken place was premature; the TRO imposed on the
petitioners a period of five (5) days from notice within which to
comply and the period had not lapsed on November 18, 2011 since
service of the TRO was only on November 15, 2011. Indeed on the
same day November 18, 2011 the petitioners made good on this lapse.
Thus, to me, a negative vote in the November 18, 2011 meeting was
the necessary conclusion because of the prematurity of determining
whether complete failure to comply had taken place.
The answer to the second question flows from the first and also
from the express terms of the TRO. By its express terms, the TRO was
immediately executory, subject to automatic lifting if failure at
compliance takes place. In other words, the TRO was to be
immediately effective particularly during the five-day period of the
petitioners compliance with the conditions. My vote, therefore, had
likewise to be in the negative, subject to the failure to comply with the
condition within the five-day compliance period.
One. It is not true that the Court or the Chief Justice has
declined to promulgate Justice Serenos dissenting opinion, following
the vote taken in the case on November 29, 2011. She agreed to
submit her dissent not later than December 1. But she did not. Neither
did she ask the Chief Justice and the other members of the Court for
additional time to submit her dissenting opinion. Consequently, the
Court promulgated its November 29 Resolution in the case without
Justice Serenos promised dissenting opinion. The Court did not deny
her the right to have her opinion promulgated together with the main
Resolution. She broke agreement by not submitting it on the date set
for it.
18
late and separate promulgation departs from established procedure,
the author of the main Resolution asked that such opinion be
calendared for En Banc consideration. She, however, sees this as a
suppression of her right to submit a dissenting opinion. Ultimately, the
En Banc decided to break precedents and allow the late promulgation
of her dissent together with the concurring opinions of the rest of the
members of the Court, like this one, to fairly present a fair picture of
the problem that Justice Sereno has created by her failure to abide by
simple agreement and the rules.
7 http://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/jurisprudence/resolutions/2011/december
2011/199034_abad.htm
I may have suggested the point sometime during the debate but
I recall withdrawing it when I realized that the TRO did not subject its
issuance and effectivity to petitioners prior or immediate compliance
with such conditions. Indeed, the collective recollection of the
majority of the Justices who did not join Justices Carpio and Serenos
dissents is that the vote was taken to conclude categorically that the
non-compliance did not suspend the force and effect of the TRO.
19
The main purpose of En Banc or Division sessions is to
deliberate on and decide the disputes between contending parties in
the cases before it. And its decisions are, by Constitutional mandate,
written by a member upon authority of the Court. The Courts
deliberations are not evidence of what it voted on. That vote is
restricted within the confines of the written order, resolution, or
decision that it issues.
VIII. PUBLICATIONS
20
Marquez also said the temporary restraining order (TRO) issued
by the high court was immediately executory and of indefinite duration.
___________________________
8 Readmore:http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/94265/sc-allows-
arroyo-to-travel-abroad
%e2%80%94official#ixzz4b6MfOnKC
In allowing the Arroyo couple to travel abroad, the full court set
three conditions which they are obliged to satisfy, Marquez said.
21
He said these conditions were the payment of a P2-million cash
bond, the appointment of a legal representative for both Arroyo and
her husband, and their personal appearance or call at the Philippine
Embassy or consular office in the country they were to visit.
But the TRO only involves the Arroyo couple, being the
petitioners, he said, noting that there were other persons included by
22
Associate Justice Antonio Carpio and Associate Justice Jose Mendoza
are the other dissenters.
The five justices who voted against the Arroyo petition wanted
the high court to conduct a hearing on the case before issuing a
decision, according to Marquez. He said the tribunal scheduled oral
arguments on the Arroyos petition on November 22. Marquez said the
court had also ordered the Arroyos and the DOJ through the Office of
the Solicitor General to file their respective comments within three
days. Marquez also disclosed that the high courts regular en banc
session on Tuesday lasted unusually longer.
Appeal allowed
23
Marquez said that while the lifting of the travel ban on the
Arroyos was immediately executory, he said the Office of the Solicitor
General could still appeal for a reversal of the order.
In the event that the justice department filed a case against the
Arroyos in the lower courts, the government must inform the tribunal
that such a formal complaint had been filed, he said.
24