PET Case No. 005
PET Case No. 005
PET Case No. 005
Leni
"Daang Matuwid" Robredo, protestee. "
x------------------------------------------- Promu~a ted: _ 0c tober 15_, _2019 ____ _
DISSENTING OPINION
CARPIO, J.:
For failure of protestant to make out his case, no basis exists to continue
with the proceedings in this election contest.
The preceding paragraph shall also apply when the election protest
involves correction of manifest errors. (Boldfacing and italicization
supplied)
The revision of the ballots in these pilot provinces had the following
objectives: verify the actual physical count of the ballots; recount the votes of
the parties; record the parties' objections and claims thereon; and mark the
ballots objected to and/or claimed by the parties in preparation for their
examination by the Tribunal and for the reception of the parties' evidence.
The final tally after the revision and the appreciation of the votes in the
pilot provinces resulted in a net increase of votes by 15,093 in favor of the
protestee.
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Dissenting Opinion 2 PET Case No. 005
Rule 65 expressly states that "[t]he Tribunal may require the protestant
or counter-protestant to indicate, within a fixed period, the province or
provinces numbering not more than three, best exemplifying the frauds or
irregularities alleged in his petition; and the revision of ballots and reception
of evidence will begin with such provinces."
As a general rule, the use of the word "may" in a statute, or in this case
Rules of Procedure, denotes that it is directory in nature. The word "may" is
generally permissive only and operates to confer discretion. 1
1
Agpalo, Ruben E., Statutory Construction, 1990 Second Edition, p. 239, citing Bersabel v. Salvador, G.R.
No. 35910, 2 I July 1978, 84 SCRA 176 (1978); Dizon v. Encarnacion, 119 Phil. 20 (1983); Cabaluna v.
Ventura, 47 Phil. 165 (1924); Castillo v. Sian, 105 Phil. 622 (1959).
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Dissenting Opinion 3 PET Case No. 005
xxxx
Similarly, the 2013 Rules of the Senate Electoral Tribunal provide that
"[i]n an election protest, the following shall also be considered: xx x [t]he list
of pilot precincts consisting of not more than twenty-five percent (25%>)
of the total number of contested precincts, which the party deems as best
exemplifying or demonstrating the electoral fraud or anomaly pleaded;
XX X." 2
There is nothing in the Rules of the PET, or in the SET and HR.ET, that
pilot provinces or precincts may be designated for each cause of action. This
is precisely because the number of pilot provinces refers to the entire protest,
not to one or two or each cause of action. There is simply no rule or law
separating the revision or recount of ballots on the ground of acts of terrorism.
To repeat, upon filing of the election protest, the Tribunal may dismiss
the protest summarily if it suffers from any of the defects enumerated in
2
Rule 39(e), 2013 Rules of the Senate Electoral Tribunal. V
,,
Section 21 3 of the PET Rules. Otherwise, the Tribunal shall require the
protestee to file an answer to the protest. After the filing of the last pleading,
the Tribunal shall order a preliminary conference. At least five days before the
preliminary conference, the parties are required to file their respective
preliminary conference briefs, which must contain the list of "not more
than three" provinces which the parties may designate pursuant to Rule
65.
It is clear from the Rules that the Tribunal may or may not dismiss the
protest summarily. If the protest suffers from any of the defects enumerated
in Section 21 of the PET Rules, the Tribunal may dismiss the protest. But if
the protest does not suffer from any such defects, the Tribunal will not dismiss
the protest and the election contest will proceed with the Tribunal requiring
the protestee to file an answer. This is the import of the word "may" in Rule
65. The word "may" in Rule 65, after the word "Tribunal" and before
the word "require," refers obviously to the Tribunal's discretion whether
or not to dismiss the protest depending on whether or not the protest
suffers from any of the defects enumerated in Section 21 of the PET
Rules. If it suffers none of such defects, the designation of "not more than
three" pilot provinces becomes mandatory. The word "may" does not refer
to the number of the pilot provinces which in no uncertain terms is limited to
a maximum of three pilot provinces best exemplifying the frauds or
irregularities protestant alleged in his protest. In other words, while the
dismissal of the protest is discretionary on the part of the Tribunal, as the
use of the word "may" clearly signifies, the number of pilot provinces,
which should be "not more than three," is mandatory if the protest is
allowed to proceed.
Moreover, should the pilot provinces refer to each cause of action, then
the maximum number of pilot provinces will definitely exceed three. This
interpretation effectively defeats and contravenes the express language of the
Rules setting a maximum of "not more than three" pilot provinces. This
interpretation will lead to absurdity. If protestant has at least five causes of
action, nothing will prevent him from designating at the most 15 pilot
provinces. Further, the election contest process starting from the retrieval,
3
RULE 21. Summary dismissal of election contest.
- An election protest or petition for quo warranto may be summarily dismissed by the Tribunal
without requiring the protestee or respondent to answer if, inter alia:
(b) the protest or petition is filed beyond the periods provided in Rules 15 and 16;
(c) the filing fee is not paid within the periods provided for in these Rules;
(d) the cash deposit or the first Two Hundred Thousand Pesos (P200,000.00) is not paid
within ten days after the filing of the protest; and
(e) the protest or petition or copies and their annexes filed with the Tribunal are not
clearly legible.
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Dissenting Opinion 5 PET Case No. 005
In examining the shades or marks used to register the votes, the Head
revisor shall bear in mind that the will of the voters reflected as votes in the
ballots shall, as much as possible, be given effect, setting aside any
technicalities. Furthermore, the votes thereon are presumed to have been
made by the voter and shall be considered as such unless reasons exist that
will justify their rejection. Any issue on the segregation and classification
4
Resolution, p. 35.
V
'I
The Tribunal noted that the objective of the revision process, which is
simply to recount the votes of the parties by mimicking ( or verifying or
confirming) how the vote counting machines read and counted the votes
during the elections, can be achieved by referring to the ERs generated by the
vote counting machines used in the 2016 elections. 5 The Tribunal held that
"in using the Election Returns and not merely adopting a specific shading
threshold, the Tribunal's revision procedure will be more flexible and adaptive
to calibrations of the voting or counting machines in the future." 6
Reference to the ERs, as well as admitting ballots with less than 50%
or at least 25% shading, during the revision process does not constitute a
change in the Rules of Procedure of the Tribunal which infringes on the rights
of any of the parties. In fact, admitting ballots with at least 25% shading
is pursuant to COMELEC Resolution No. 16-0600 dated 6 September
2016. In its Comment, the COMELEC stated that "it calibrated the
VCMs for the 2016 National and Local Elections to read marks that cover
at least about 25°/o (when seen by human eyes) of the oval for each
candidate as valid votes. All election results were based on this
threshold." 7
Moreover, during the appreciation process, which takes place after the
revision process, the ballots with less than 25% shading or even only a dot
or line appearing in the oval as long as the voter's manner of voting is
consistent are admitted as valid votes for either party pursuant to the
intent rule. This has been the universal rule and practice in the
appreciation of ballots in the present case, and in all other previous cases,
whether in the COMELEC, SET or HRET. Hence, the amount of shading,
whether 100% or 10% as long as the manner of voting is consistent, is
immaterial in determining the intent of the voter. It is settled that the cardinal
objective in ballot appreciation is to discover and give effect to, rather than
frustrate, the intention of the voter. 8 To rule otherwise, that is to reject ballots
with less than 25% shading pursuant to the 50% threshold as stated in the PET
Rules, will necessarily result to disenfranchisement of the voters.
5
Id. at 36.
6
Id. at 37.
7
Id, at 35.
8
Locsin v. House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal, 706 Phil. 590,604 (2013), citing Torres v. House
of Representatives Electoral Tribunal, 404 Phil. 125, 142 (200 I).
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Dissenting Opinion 7 PET Case No. 005
It is well-settled that there are two (2) indispensable requisites that must
concur in order to justify the nullification of the election:
9
785 Phil. 683 (2016).
10
Id. at 705.
11
http://hret.gov.ph/file-manager/2013-20 l 6_023 _dissenting-com.pdf (visited 14 October 2019).
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Dissenting Opinion 8 PET Case No. 005
(1) The illegality of the ballots must affect more than fifty percent (50%)
of the votes cast on the specific precinct or precincts sought to be
annulled, or in case of the entire municipality, more than fifty
percent (50%) of its total precincts and the votes cast therein; and
Since protestant's two causes of action are both anchored on the actual
revision and recount of the votes cast as appearing in the ballots, protestant
should have included in his pilot provinces any of the provinces which he
deems best exemplified or demonstrated the acts of terrorism he alleged in his
protest. The provinces subject of an annulment case should form part of
the pilot provinces because all these provinces will be subjected to
revision and recount of ballots. Not doing so amounts to a waiver on the part
of the protestant to have the ballots from the excluded contested provinces
revised and recounted.
12
Abayon v. House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal, supra note 9, at 705.
✓
13
Resolution, p. 40.
Dissenting Opinion 9 PET Case No. 005
the ARMM provinces are not part of the pilot provinces. In other words,
protestant knowingly excluded these ARMM provinces from his chosen pilot
provinces, which shall serve as "test cases" by which the Tribunal will
determine whether or not to proceed with the revision of ballots of the
remaining contested provinces. 14 Insofar as protestant is concerned,
annulment of election results will not require revision of ballots, and thus he
intended to merely present "testimonial and documentary evidence that would
prove that voters in Lanao del Sur, Maguindanao and Basilan were deprived
of their right to vote on election day." 15
(1) The illegality of the ballots must affect more than fifty percent (50%)
of the votes cast on the specific precinct or precincts sought to be
annulled, or in case of the entire municipality, more than fifty
percent (50%) of its total precincts and the votes cast therein; and
14
Id. at 24.
15
Id. at 19.
16
Abayon v. House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal, supra note 9, at 705.
17
Abubakar v. House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal, 546 Phil. 585, 598 (2007), citing Lerias v.
House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal, G.R. No. 97105, 15 October 1991, 202 SCRA 808.
V
Dissenting Opinion 10 PET Case No. 005
in the process will make a mockery of the election contest process. This the
Tribunal must definitely not allow.
Associate Justice
~ .... 0. ARICHETA
Clerk of Court En Banc
S11pr¢.m"' Cmirt