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Duremdes - v. - Commission - On - Elections

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EN BANC

[G.R. Nos. 86362-63. October 27, 1989.]

RAMON D. DUREMDES , petitioner, vs. COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS,


PROVINCIAL BOARD OF CANVASSERS OF ILOILO, LAKAS NG BANSA
and CIPRIANO B. PENAFLORIDA , respondents.

Panganiban, Benitez, Barinaga & Bautista Law O ces, Lead Counsel for
petitioner.
Nery D. Duremdes Co-counsel for petitioner.
Brillantes, Nachura, Navarro & Arcilla Law Offices for private respondent.

SYLLABUS

1. ELECTION LAW; PRE-PROCLAMATION CONTROVERSY; ERRORS IN THE


STATEMENTS OF VOTES; PREPARATION THEREOF; BEING AN ADMINISTRATIVE
FUNCTION OF THE BOARD OF CANVASSERS, A QUESTION RELATING TO THE
PROCEEDINGS OF SAID BOARD MAY BE RAISED DIRECTLY WITH THE COMELEC AS A
PRE-PROCLAMATION CONTROVERSY. — The Statement of Votes is a tabulation per
precinct of the votes garnered by the candidates as re ected in the election returns. Its
preparation is an administrative function of the Board of Canvassers. As pointed out by
the Solicitor General, "it is a purely mechanical act of the Board of Canvassers in the
performance of which the Commission has direct control and supervision," pursuant to
Section 227 of the Omnibus Election Code. By virtue of that power, added to its overall
function to "decide all questions affecting elections" (Article IX[C] Section 2[3], 1987
Constitution), a question pertaining to the proceedings of said Board may be raised
directly with the COMELEC as a pre-proclamation controversy pursuant to Sec. 241 of
the Omnibus Election Code.
2. ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; ACTION OF THE COMELEC IN THE PREMISES, AN EXERCISE OF
ITS ORIGINAL JURISDICTION. — When so elevated, the COMELEC acts in the exercise of
its original jurisdiction for which reason it is not indispensable that the issue be raised
before the Board of Canvassers during the canvassing. The COMELEC is not
discharging its appellate jurisdiction under Section 245 of the Omnibus Election Code,
which has to do with contests regarding the inclusion or exclusion in the canvass of any
election returns, with a prescribed appellate procedure to follow.
3. CIVIL PROCEDURE; LAWS OF PROCEDURE; RETROACTIVE APPLICATION, IF
NO SUBSTANTIAL RIGHTS ARE IMPAIRED, ALLOWED. — Laws of procedure may be
retroactively applied provided no substantial rights are impaired (Bernardo vs. Court of
Appeals, G.R. No. 30821, December 14, 1988).
4. ELECTION LAW; PRE-PROCLAMATION CONTROVERSY; DISCREPANCIES
BETWEEN THE ENTRIES IN THE STATEMENT OF VOTES AND THAT OF THE ELECTION
RETURNS; ORDER OF COMELEC TO BOARD OF CANVASSERS TO RECONVENE AND
PREPARE A NEW STATEMENT OF VOTES AND CERTIFICATE OF CANVASS, PROPER. —
That discrepancies exist between the entries in the Statement of Votes and that
re ected in the questioned election returns, was openly admitted by the Chairman of
the Board of Canvassers at the scheduled promulgation on 15 December 1988 of the
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9th and 10th placers of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan (p. 6, COMELEC Decision).
Under the circumstances, therefore, and considering that any error in the Statement of
Votes would affect the proclamation made on the basis thereof, and primordially, in
order to determine the true will of the electorate, the COMELEC Decision ordering the
Board of Canvassers to reconvene and prepare a new Statement of Votes and
Certi cate of Canvass should be upheld: The Commission on Elections has ample
power to see to it that elections are held in a clean and orderly manner and it may
decide all questions affecting the elections. It has original jurisdiction on all matters
relating to election returns, including the veri cation of the number of votes received by
opposing candidates in the election returns as compared to the statement of votes in
order to insure that the true will of the people is known. Such clerical error in the
statement of votes can be ordered corrected by the COMELEC" (Villaroya vs. Comelec,
L-79646-47, 13 November 1987, 155 SCRA 633).
5. ID.; INVALID PROCLAMATION; PROCLAIMED CANDIDATE'S ASSUMPTION OF
OFFICE: COMELEC NOT DEPRIVED OF POWER TO DECLARE THE NULLITY AND
ANNULMENT OF THE PROCLAMATION. — Where a proclamation is null and void, the
proclamation is no proclamation at all and the proclaimed candidate's assumption of
o ce cannot deprive the COMELEC of the power to declare such nullity and annul the
proclamation (Aguam vs. COMELEC, L-28955, 28 May 1968, 23 SCRA 883).
6. ID.; ID.; PROCLAMATION MADE BY THE BOARD OF CANVASSERS PENDING
RESOLUTION OF TWO [2] PETITIONS BEFORE THE COMELEC; VOID AB INITIO. —
DUREMDES' proclamation must be deemed to have been null and void. It was made on
31 January 1988 after PENAFLORIDA had led with the COMELEC on 29 January 1988
an "Appeal by Way of a Petition for Review" from the rulings of the Board, and on 30
January 1988, a Petition for the annulment of election returns and the suspension of the
proclamation of any candidate (SPC Case No. 88-448). The COMELEC had not resolved
either Petition at the time the proclamation was made. Pursuant to Sections 245, supra,
and 238 of the Omnibus Election Code, therefore, the Board of Canvassers should not
have proclaimed any candidate without waiting for the authorization by the COMELEC.
Any proclamation thus made is void ab initio.
7. ID.; CANVASS OF VOTES; ALL VOTES TO BE CONSIDERED, NONE TO BE
OMITTED. — All the votes cast in an election must be considered because to disregard
returns is in effect to disenfranchise the voters (Mutuc vs. COMELEC, L-28517,
February 21, 1968, 22 SCRA 662). A canvass can not be re ective of the true vote of the
electorate unless all returns are considered and none is omitted (Datu Sinsuat vs.
Pendatun, L-31501, June 30, 1970, 33 SCRA 630).
8. ID.; ID.; ID.; TRUE WILL OF THE ELECTORATE, THE PARAMOUNT
CONSIDERATION. — "Election contests involve public interest. Technicalities and
procedural barriers should not be allowed to stand if they constitute an obstacle to the
determination of the true will of the electorate in the choice of their elective o cials ..
Laws governing election contests must be liberally construed to the end that the will of
the people in the choice of public o cials may not be defeated by mere technical
objections. In an election case the court has an imperative duty to ascertain by all
means within its command who is the real candidate elected by the electorate" (Juliano
vs. CA and Sinsuat, 20 SCRA 808, 818-19, July 28, 1967).

DECISION

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MELENCIO-HERRERA , J : p

At stake in this election controversy is the Vice-gubernatorial position of the


Province of Iloilo.
The chronology of the facts and of the case follows:
1. In the 18 January 1988 elections, petitioner Ramon D. DUREMDES, private
respondent Cipriano B. PENAFLORIDA, and Ru no Palabrica ran for the o ce of Vice-
Governor of the Province of Iloilo.
DUREMDES was the o cial candidate of the Liberal Party (LP) and PDP-Laban
coalition, while PENAFLORIDA was the official candidate of the Lakas ng Bansa (Lakas).
2. During the canvass of votes by the Provincial Board of Canvassers of Iloilo,
which lasted from 20 January to 31 January 1988, PENAFLORIDA objected verbally to
some 110 election returns from various precincts, which he followed up with written
objections. The Board overruled the same in separate Orders either because they were
not timely led or that the formal defects did not affect the genuineness of the returns,
or that in case of allegations of tampering, no evidence was presented to support the
charge. The Board thus ordered the inclusion of the questioned election returns. This
was re ected in a separate column under the heading "Contested/Deferred Votes" in
the "Certificate of Votes of Candidates" (Form No. 13-A, Annex "K," Petition, p. 60 Rollo).
3. Under date of 29 January 1988, PENAFLORIDA and the Lakas led with the
COMELEC an "Appeal by Way of a Petition for Review," from the aforesaid rulings of the
Board pleading, among others, for the exclusion of the questioned election returns and
for PENAFLORIDA's proclamation as the elected Vice-Governor of Iloilo (Annex "L," ibid.,
p. 62, Rollo).
4. On 30 January 1988, PENAFLORIDA led, also with the COMELEC, a Petition
seeking the annulment of election returns and the suspension of the proclamation of
any candidate, docketed as SPC Case No. 88-448 (Annex "Q," ibid., p. 96, Rollo).
5. On 31 January 1988, in a "Certi cation of Canvass of Votes and Proclamation
of the Winning Candidates for Provincial O ces" (Form No. 26, Annex "N," ibid., p. 84,
Rollo), the Board proclaimed DUREMDES as the duly elected Vice-Governor, together
with the duly elected Governor and only eight (8) members of the Sangguniang
Panlalawigan of Iloilo. Certi ed to was that DUREMDES had garnered 157, 361 votes
(the number of his uncontested votes) in 2,377 precincts.
Apparently, the Board had made the proclamation upon DUREMDES'
"Manifestation and Motion," dated the same day, 31 January 1988, that "the contested
returns will not adversely affect the uncontested results of the election (See Section
245, Omnibus Election Code) . . . because of the absolute certainty that candidate
Ramon Duremdes has obtained the highest number of votes, whether or not the
contested votes were excluded."
6. The tabulated data in the Certi cate of Votes of Candidates (Annex "K,"
Petition) is reproduced below in so far as the protagonists herein are concerned, with
the totals and/or remainders supplied by us:
"Non-Contested" "Contested/ " Grand
Deferred Total"
Votes"

DUREMDES 157,361 13,373 171,734


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PENAFLORIDA -150,075 + 4,427 -154,502
———— ———— ————
7,286 17,800 17,232
6. On 2 February 1988, DUREMDES took his oath and assumed o ce (Annex "O,"
ibid.).
7. Also on 2 February 1988, an "Intervention with Motion to Dismiss" was led by
DUREMDES and two other candidates for the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, seeking the
denial of PENAFLORIDA's Petition for Annulment before the COMELEC, for lack of
merit.
8. On 12 February 1988, Perla S. Zulueta (also an Intervenor in SPC Case No. 88-
448), led SPC Case No. 88-653 pleading that she be proclaimed as one of the winning
candidates in the 10-member Iloilo Sangguniang Panlalawigan.
9. On 8 March 1988, PENAFLORIDA led an Amended Petition challenging, in
addition, the legality of the composition of the Provincial Board of Canvassers, "a
ground just known lately," and praying for a recanvassing of the objected election
returns.
10. On 4 April 1988, the COMELEC granted a Motion for the consolidation of SPC
Case No. 88-653 with SPC Case No. 88-448.
11. On 20 June 1988, PENAFLORIDA led with the COMELEC a Supplemental
Petition ("in ampli cation of the Amended petition for veri cation and correction")
charging, among others, that DUREMDES was proclaimed "on the basis of increased
votes in the uno cial and separately tallied Statement of Votes, more than what was
actually reflected in the Election Returns."
12. On 20 September 1988, the COMELEC (Second Division), after hearing,
issued a Per Curiam Resolution, sustaining the rulings of the Board of Canvassers on
PENAFLORIDA's objections, as well as DUREMDES' proclamation. The decretal portion
of that Resolution reads:
"WHEREFORE, IN VIEW OF ALL THE FOREGOING, judgment is hereby
rendered:

"1. Sustaining and a rming the rulings of the Provincial Board of


Canvassers of Iloilo on the objections interposed by petitioner on the inclusion in
the canvass of the questioned returns;
"2. Sustaining the proclamation of the winning candidate for Vice-
Governor;
"3. Directing the Provincial Board of Canvassers to immediately reconvene
end to include in the canvass the questioned election returns; and thereafter to
proclaim the winning candidates for the Ninth (9th) and Tenth (10th) slots for the
Sangguniang Panlalawigan of the Province of Iloilo; and

"4. Directing the Law Department of the Commission to conduct a


thorough investigation into the matter of the reported falsi cation of the
transcripts of the stenographic notes of Stenographer Nelly C. Escana to
determine the parties responsible therefor and to cause the ling of the necessary
criminal complaint against those probably guilty thereof as the evidence may
warrant, and if the assistance of the National Bureau of Investigation or any other
investigative arm of the Government for that purpose is necessary, to request for
such assistance.
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"No pronouncement as to costs." (pp. 137-138, Rollo) (Emphasis ours).

13. On 27 September 1988, PENAFLORIDA moved for reconsideration,


whereupon, the Second Division certi ed and elevated the case to the COMELEC en
banc.
14. On 4 October 1988, PENAFLORIDA led a Motion to Suspend
Implementation of the Second Division Resolution of 20 September 1988 pending
resolution of his Motion for Reconsideration, which suspension was granted by the
COMELEC on 5 October 1988.
15. In the meantime, on 10 December 1988, the Board reconvened for the
purpose of proclaiming the 9th and 10th placers for the Sangguniang Panlalawigan of
Iloilo. It was at the scheduled promulgation of 15 December 1988 that the Chairman of
the Board openly admitted the existence of discrepancies between the entries of votes
in the Statement of Votes and the votes re ected in the questioned election returns (p.
6, COMELEC en banc Decision).
16. On 12 January 1989, the COMELEC en banc rendered the assailed Per Curiam
Decision with the following disposition:
WHEREFORE, IN THE LIGHT OF ALL THE FOREGOING, judgment is hereby
rendered:
"1. Affirming the following parts of the dispositive portion of the Resolution
of the Second Division promulgated on 20 September 1988:
'1. Sustaining and a rming the rulings of the Provincial Board of
Canvassers of Iloilo on the objections interposed by petitioner on the
inclusion in the canvass of the questioned returns.

'2. Directing the Provincial Board of Canvassers to immediately


reconvene and to include in the canvass the questioned election returns;
and thereafter to proclaim the winning candidates for the Ninth (9th) and
Tenth (10th) slots for the Sangguniang Panlalawigan of the Province of
Iloilo; and

'3. Directing the Law Department of the Commission to conduct a


thorough investigation into the matter of the reported falsi cation of the
transcripts of the stenographic notes of Stenographer Nelly Escana to
determine the parties responsible therefor and to cause the ling of the
necessary criminal complaint against those probably guilty thereof as the
evidence may warrant, and if the assistance of the National Bureau of
Investigation or any other investigative arm of the Government for that
purpose is necessary, to request for such assistance.'
"2. Reversing that part of the dispositive portion which reads:

'2. Sustaining the proclamation of the winning candidate for Vice-


Governor and setting aside the proclamation of Intervenor Ramon
Duremdes as Vice-Governor of Iloilo.'
"3. Declaring as null and void the proclamation of Intervenor Ramon
Duremdes;
"4. Directing the Provincial Board of Canvassers of Iloilo to immediately
reconvene and to include in the canvass of votes for Vice-Governor the
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questioned contested returns. For that purpose, the Board shall make a formal
tabulation of the results of the contested returns and shall prepare a new
Statement of Votes and Certificate of Canvass; and
"5. Directing the Provincial Board of Canvassers to thereafter proclaim the
winning candidate for Vice-Governor of Iloilo" (pp. 38-40, Rollo). (Emphasis ours)

His proclamation having been nulli ed by the COMELEC, DUREMDES avails of


this recourse.
On 17 January 1989, the Court ordered that the status quo existing prior to the
promulgation of the above COMELEC en banc Decision be maintained until further
orders.
DUREMDES faults the COMELEC with grave abuse of discretion for having
disregarded the well-settled doctrines (1) that matters of protest, objections or issues
not originally raised before the Board of Canvassers upon the opening of the returns,
cannot be raised for the rst time before the COMELEC; and (2) that after a
proclamation has been made, a pre-proclamation controversy is no longer viable, the
proper recourse being an election protest.
It is true that, before the Board of Canvassers, PENAFLORIDA did not raise in
issue the matter of the discrepancies between the number of votes appearing in the
Statement of Votes and that in the Election Returns. As a matter of fact that matter is
not even listed as one of the issues that may be raised in pre-proclamation
controversies under Section 243 of the Omnibus Election Code. 1
Nonetheless, as aptly stated in the assailed COMELEC en banc Decision:
"Indeed, errors in the Statement of Votes do not indubitably appear to be
issues that may be raised in a pre-proclamation controversy under Section 243 of
the Omnibus Election Code. In this respect, the law is silent as to when the same
may be raised. We are, however, not unmindful of the fact that the statement of
votes supports the certi cate of canvass and shall be the basis of proclamation
(Sec. 231, paragraph 2). Consequently, any error in the Statement of Votes would
affect the proclamation made on the basis thereof. The true will of the electorate
may thus be not fully and faithfully reflected by the proclamation" (at pp. 7-8).

We nd no grave abuse of discretion in the foregoing COMELEC pronouncement.


The Statement of Votes is a tabulation per precinct of the votes garnered by the
candidates as re ected in the election returns. Its preparation is an administrative
function of the Board of Canvassers. As pointed out by the Solicitor General, "it is a
purely mechanical act of the Board of Canvassers in the performance of which the
Commission has direct control and supervision," pursuant to Section 227 of the
Omnibus Election Code.
"Sec. 227. Supervision and control over board of canvassers. — The
Commission shall have direct control and supervision over the board of
canvassers.

xxx xxx xxx


By virtue of that power, added to its overall function to "decide all questions
affecting elections" (Article IX[C] Section 2[3], 1987 Constitution), a question pertaining
to the proceedings of said Board may be raised directly with the COMELEC as a pre-
proclamation controversy.
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"Sec. 241. Definition. — A pre-proclamation controversy refers to any
question pertaining to or affecting the proceedings of the board of canvassers
which may be raised by any candidate or by any registered political party or
coalition of political parties before the board or directly with the Commission, or
any matter raised under Sections 233, 234, 235 and 236 in relation to the
exploration, transmission, receipt, custody and appreciation of the election
returns" (Omnibus Election Code). (Emphasis supplied).

When so elevated, the COMELEC acts in the exercise of its original jurisdiction for
which reason it is not indispensable that the issue be raised before the Board of
Canvassers during the canvassing. The COMELEC is not discharging its appellate
jurisdiction under Section 245 of the Omnibus Election Code, which has to do with
contests regarding the inclusion or exclusion in the canvass of any election returns, with
a prescribed appellate procedure to follow. 2
Cognizance may also be taken of the fact that at the time PENAFLORIDA led the
Supplemental Petition on 20 June 1988, there was no clear-cut rule on the matter. It
was only in the COMELEC Rules of Procedure, which took effect on 15 November 1988,
wherein it was provided under subparagraph (2), paragraph (a), Section 4 of Rule 27,
that the matter of correction of the statement of votes may be the subject of a pre-
proclamation case which may be led directly with the Commission. Nonetheless, there
should be no question, considering the aforequoted Section 241 in relation to Section
227 of the Omnibus Election Code, that the issue is one that can be raised directly with
the COMELEC. It is a procedure that best recommends itself specially considering that
the Statement of Votes is a vital component in the electoral process. It supports the
Certificate of Canvass and is the basis for proclamation.
"SEC. 231. Canvass by the board. —
"xxx xxx xxx
"The respective board of canvassers shall prepare a certi cate of canvass
duly signed and a xed with the imprint of the thumb of the right hand of each
member, supported by a statement of the votes received by each candidate in
each polling place and, on the basis thereof, shall proclaim as elected the
candidates who obtained the highest number of votes cast in the province, city,
municipality or barangay. Failure to comply with this requirement shall constitute
an election offense.

"xxx xxx xxx"


DUREMDES also calls attention to Rule 13, Section 1 (g) of the COMELEC Rules
of Procedure, which does not allow the ling of supplemental pleadings. As stated
heretofore, however, these Rules took effect only on 15 November 1988, or ve months
after the Supplemental Petition was led. Said rule, therefore, cannot be given
retroactive effect the legal truth being that laws of procedure may be retroactively
applied provided no substantial rights are impaired (Bernardo vs. Court of Appeals, G.R.
No. 30821, December 14, 1988).
That discrepancies exist between the entries in the Statement of Votes and that
re ected in the questioned election returns, was openly admitted by the Chairman of
the Board of Canvassers at the scheduled promulgation on 15 December 1988 of the
9th and 10th placers of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan (p. 6, COMELEC Decision). What
is more, it is also admitted by the parties except that PENAFLORIDA assails the
correctness of the Statement of Votes, while DUREMDES maintains its correctness but
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avers the possibility of the tampering of the questioned election returns (p. 7, ibid.)
Under the circumstances, therefore, and considering that any error in the
Statement of Votes would affect the proclamation made on the basis thereof, and
primordially, in order to determine the true will of the electorate, the COMELEC Decision
ordering the Board of Canvassers to reconvene and prepare a new Statement of Votes
and Certificate of Canvass should be upheld.
"The Commission on Elections has ample power to see to it that elections
are held in a clean and orderly manner and it may decide all questions affecting
the elections. It has original jurisdiction on all matters relating to election returns,
including the veri cation of the number of votes received by opposing candidates
in the election returns as compared to the statement of votes in order to insure
that the true will of the people is known. Such clerical error in the statement of
votes can be ordered corrected by the COMELEC" (Villaroya vs. Comelec, L-79646-
47, 13 November 1987, 155 SCRA 633).

It is DUREMDES' further submission that his proclamation could not be declared


null and void because a pre-proclamation controversy is not proper after a
proclamation has been made, the proper recourse being an election protest. This is on
the assumption, however, that there has been a valid proclamation. Where a
proclamation is null and void, the proclamation is no proclamation at all and the
proclaimed candidate's assumption of o ce cannot deprive the COMELEC of the
power to declare such nullity and annul the proclamation (Aguam vs. COMELEC, L-
28955, 28 May 1968, 23 SCRA 883).
DUREMDES' proclamation must be deemed to have been null and void. It was
made on 31 January 1988 after PENAFLORIDA had led with the COMELEC on 29
January 1988 an "Appeal by Way of a Petition for Review" from the rulings of the Board,
and on 30 January 1988, a Petition for the annulment of election returns and the
suspension of the proclamation of any candidate (SPC Case No. 88-448). The
COMELEC had not resolved either Petition at the time the proclamation was made.
Pursuant to Sections 245, supra, and 238 of the Omnibus Election Code, therefore, the
Board of Canvassers should not have proclaimed any candidate without waiting for the
authorization by the COMELEC. Any proclamation thus made is void ab initio.
"SEC. 238. Canvass of remaining or unquestioned returns to continue. — In
cases under Sections 233, 234, 235 and 236 hereof, the board of canvassers shall
continue the canvass of the remaining or unquestioned election returns. If, after
the canvass of all the said returns, it should be determined that the returns which
have been set aside will affect the result of the election, no proclamation shall be
made except upon orders of the Commission after due notice and hearing. Any
proclamation made in violation hereof shall be null and void."

In this case, with 110 contested election returns and 25,930 ballots questioned
(COMELEC Resolution, September 20, 1988, p. 4, p. 115, Rollo), DUREMDES' margin of
7,286 non-contested votes could very well be offset.
Moreover, DUREMDES' proclamation was made on the basis of an o cial
canvass of the votes cast in 2,377 precincts only (Annex "N," Petition), when there were
actually 2,487 precincts. The votes in 110 precincts, therefore, were not included, which
is exactly the number of 110 election returns questioned by PENAFLORIDA. Further,
DUREMDES was certi ed to have garnered 157, 361 votes (ibid.), which number
represents the non-contested votes only, and clearly excludes the totality of the
"contested/deferred votes" of the candidates concerned.
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DUREMDES' proclamation having been based on an incomplete canvass, no
grave abuse of discretion can be ascribed to the COMELEC for directing the Provincial
Board of Canvassers of Iloilo "to immediately reconvene and to include in the canvass
of votes for Vice-Governor the questioned contested returns." All the votes cast in an
election must be considered because to disregard returns is in effect to disenfranchise
the voters (Mutuc vs. COMELEC, L-28517, February 21, 1968, 22 SCRA 662). A canvass
can not be re ective of the true vote of the electorate unless all returns are considered
and none is omitted (Datu Sinsuat vs. Pendatun, L-31501, June 30, 1970, 33 SCRA 630).
Over and above all else, the determination of the true will of the electorate should
be the paramount consideration.
"Election contests involve public interest. Technicalities and procedural
barriers should not be allowed to stand if they constitute an obstacle to the
determination of the true will of the electorate in the choice of their elective
o cials .. Laws governing election contests must be liberally construed to the
end that the will of the people in the choice of public o cials may not be
defeated by mere technical objections. In an election case the court has an
imperative duty to ascertain by all means within its command who is the real
candidate elected by the electorate" (Juliano vs. CA and Sinsuat, 20 SCRA 808,
818-19, July 28, 1967).

WHEREFORE, absent any grave abuse of discretion on the part of respondent


Commission on Elections, this Petition for Certiorari is hereby DISMISSED. The status
quo Order heretofore issued is hereby ordered LIFTED. No costs.
SO ORDERED.
Fernan, C .J ., Narvasa, Gutierrez, Jr., Cruz, Paras, Feliciano, Gancayco, Padilla,
Bidin, Sarmiento, Cortes, Griño-Aquino, Medialdea and Regalado, JJ ., concur.

Footnotes
1. SEC. 243. Issues that may be raised in pre-proclamation controversy . — The following shall
be proper issues that may be raised in a pre-proclamation controversy:
(a) Illegal composition or proceeding of the board of canvassers;
(b) The canvassed election returns are incomplete, contain material defects, appear to be
tampered with or falsified, or contain discrepancies in the same returns or in other
authentic copies thereof as mentioned in Sections 233, 234, 235 and 236 of this Code;
(c) The election returns were prepared under duress, threats, coercion, or intimidation, or
they are obviously manufactured or not authentic; and
(d) When substitute or fraudulent returns in controverted polling places were canvassed,
the results of which materially affected the standing of the aggrieved candidate or
candidates.

2. SEC. 245. Contested election returns. — Any candidate, political party or coalition of political
parties, contesting the inclusion or exclusion in the canvass of any election returns on
any of the grounds authorized under this article or in Sections 234, 235 and 236 of
Article XIX shall submit their verbal objections to the chairman of the board of
canvassers at the time the questioned return is presented for inclusion or exclusion,
which objections shall be noted in the minutes of the canvassing.

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The board of canvassers upon receipt of any such objections shall automatically defer
the canvass of the contested returns and shall proceed to canvass the rest of the returns
which are not contested by any party.
Within twenty-four hours from and after the presentation of a verbal objection, the same
shall be submitted in written form to the board of canvassers. Thereafter, the board of
canvassers shall take up each contested return, consider the written objections thereto
and summarily rule thereon. Said ruling shall be made orally initially and then reduced to
writing by the board within twenty-four hours from the time the oral ruling is made.

Any party adversely affected by an oral ruling on its/his objection shall immediately
state orally whether it/he intends to appeal said ruling. The said intent to appeal shall be
stated in the minutes of the canvassing. If a party manifests its intent to appeal, the
board of canvassers shall set aside the return and proceed to rule on the other contested
returns. When all the contested returns have been ruled upon by it, the board of
canvassers shall suspend the canvass and shall make an appropriate report to the
Commission, copy furnished the parties.
The board of canvassers shall not proclaim any candidate as winner unless authorized
by the Commission after the latter has ruled on the objections brought to it on appeal by
the losing party and any proclamation made in violation hereof shall be void ab initio,
unless the contested returns will not adversely affect the results of the election.

CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2020 cdasiaonline.com

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