Mirasol vs. DPWH
Mirasol vs. DPWH
Mirasol vs. DPWH
Mirasol v. DPWH:*
Regulation of Traffic on Tollways
First Issue:
Dismissal of the Petition
Not Barred by Res Judicata
Second Issue:
Validity of DO 74, DO 215,
and the TRB Regulations
The Court held that the RTC had erred in construing that the
authority granted to the then Department of Public Works and
Communications under Section 4 of Republic Act 2000 -- to
regulate, restrict or prohibit access to limited-access facilities --
applied to the DPWH. The RTC assumed that the authority of the
DPWH was derived merely from that of the latters predecessor,
the Department of Public Works and Communications. This
assumption, however, failed to consider the evolution of the earlier
department.
History of the DPWH
Third Issue:
Constitutionality of AO 1 and DO 123
The right to travel did not mean the right to choose any
vehicle in traversing a tollway. Petitioners were free to access the
tollway as much as the rest of the public. However, the mode in
which they wished to travel, pertaining to their manner of using the
tollway, was a subject that could validly be limited by regulation.
There was no absolute right to drive; on the contrary, this privilege
was heavily regulated.
*
GR No. 158793, June 8, 2006, per Antonio T. Carpio, J.
** Concurred in by Chief Justice Artemio V. Panganiban; and Justices Reynato S.
Puno, Leonardo A. Quisumbing, Angelina Sandoval Gutierrez, Ma. Alicia
Austria-Martinez, Renato C. Corona, Conchita Carpio Morales, Romeo J. Callejo
Sr., and Presbitero J. Velasco Jr. A Dissent was filed by Justice Dante O. Tinga,
joined by Justices Adolfo S. Azcuna, Minita V. Chico-Nazario, and Cancio C.
Garcia. Justice Consuelo Ynares-Santiago was on leave.