G.R. No. 207900
G.R. No. 207900
G.R. No. 207900
For the Court's resolution is a Petition for Certiorari and Prohibition1 under
Rule 65, which petitioner Gamal S. Hayudini (Hayudini) filed to set aside
and annul the assailed Resolutions of the Commission on Elections
(COMELEC), dated June 20, 20132 and July 10, 2013,3 which cancelled his
Certificate of Candidacy for the mayoralty seat in the 2013 local elections in
South Ubian, Tawi-Tawi, for having been issued with grave abuse of
discretion amounting to lack or in excess of jurisdiction.
On May 13, 2013, Hayudini won the mayoralty race in South Ubian, Tawi-
Tawi. He was proclaimed and, consequently, took his oath of office.
SO ORDERED.12
On July 10, 2013, the COMELEC En Banc denied Hayudini’s Motion for
Reconsideration for lack of merit. The decretal portion of the En Banc’s
assailed Resolution states:
"Ergo, since respondent Lonzanida was never a candidate for the position of
mayor [of] San Antonio, Zambales, the votes cast for him should be
considered stray votes. Consequently, Intervenor Antipolo, who remains as
the sole candidate for the mayoralty post and obtained the highest number of
votes, should now be proclaimed as the duly-elected Mayor of San Antonio,
Zambales.
SO ORDERED.14
Thus, Hayudini filed the instant petition for certiorari and prohibition.
A.
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C.
III.
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L.
Section 2. Period to File Petition. — The Petition must be filed within five
(5) days from the last day for filing of certificate of candidacy; but not later
than twenty five (25) days from the time of filing of the certificate of
candidacy subject of the Petition. In case of a substitute candidate, the
Petition must be filed within five (5) days from the time the substitute
candidate filed his certificate of candidacy.
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1. The petitioner shall, before filing of the Petition, furnish a copy of the
Petition, through personal service to the respondent. In cases where personal
service is not feasible, or the respondent refuses to receive the Petition, or
the respondents’ whereabouts cannot be ascertained, the petitioner shall
execute an affidavit stating the reason or circumstances therefor and resort to
5
Here, Hayudini filed his CoC on October 5, 2012, which was also the last
day of filing of CoC for the May 13, 2013 elections. Omar, on the other
hand, filed the subject petition only on March 26, 2013. Under the
COMELEC Rules, a Petition to Deny Due Course or Cancel CoC must be
filed within five days from the last day for filing a certificate of candidacy,
but not later than twenty-five days from the time of filing of the CoC subject
of the petition. Clearly, Omar’s petition was filed way beyond the prescribed
period. Likewise, he failed to provide sufficient explanation as to why his
petition was not served personally to Hayudini.
Settled is the rule that the COMELEC Rules of Procedure are subject to
liberal construction. The COMELEC has the power to liberally interpret or
even suspend its rules of procedure in the interest of justice, including
obtaining a speedy disposition of all matters pending before it. This
liberality is for the purpose of promoting the effective and efficient
implementation of its objectives − ensuring the holding of free, orderly,
honest, peaceful, and credible elections, as well as achieving just,
expeditious, and inexpensive determination and disposition of every action
and proceeding brought before the COMELEC. Unlike an ordinary civil
action, an election contest is imbued with public interest. It involves not only
the adjudication of private and pecuniary interests of rival candidates, but
also the paramount need of dispelling the uncertainty which beclouds the
real choice of the electorate. And the tribunal has the corresponding duty to
ascertain, by all means within its command, whom the people truly chose as
their rightful leader.21
Indeed, Omar had previously filed a Petition to Deny Due Course or Cancel
Hayudini’s CoC on October 15, 2012, docketed as SPA No. 13-106(DC)(F).
This was dismissed on January 31, 2013, or the same day the MCTC granted
Hayudini’s petition to be included in the list of voters. However, on March 8,
2013, the RTC reversed the MCTC ruling and, consequently, ordered the
6
Given the finality of the RTC decision, the same should be considered a
valid supervening event. A supervening event refers to facts and events
transpiring after the judgment or order had become executory. These
circumstances affect or change the substance of the judgment and render its
execution inequitable.26 Here, the RTC’s March 8, 2013 decision, ordering
the deletion of Hayudini’s name in the list of voters, which came after the
dismissal of Omar’s first petition, is indubitably a supervening event which
would render the execution of the ruling in SPA No. 13-106(DC)(F)
iniquitous and unjust. As the COMELEC aptly ruled, the decision to exclude
Hayudini was still non-existent when the COMELEC first promulgated the
Resolution in SPA No. 13-106(DC)(F) on January 31, 2013, or when the
issues involved therein were passed upon.27 The First Division even
expressed that although the Election Registration Board (ERB) denied
Hayudini’s application for registration, it could not adopt the same because it
was not yet final as Hayudini was still to file a Petition for Inclusion before
the MCTC.28 Thus, it is not far-fetched to say that had this final RTC
finding been existent before, the COMELEC First Division could have taken
judicial notice of it and issued a substantially different ruling in SPA No. 13-
106(DC)(F).29
The same ruling adequately equipped Omar with the necessary ground to
successfully have Hayudini’s CoC struck down. Under the rules, a statement
in a certificate of candidacy claiming that a candidate is eligible to run for
public office when in truth he is not, is a false material representation, a
ground for a petition under Section 78 of the Omnibus Election Code.
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Section 74 requires the candidate to state under oath in his CoC "that he is
eligible for said office." A candidate is eligible if he has a right to run for the
public office. If a candidate is not actually eligible because he is not a
registered voter in the municipality where he intends to be elected, but still
he states under oath in his certificate of candidacy that he is eligible to run
for public office, then the candidate clearly makes a false material
representation, a ground to support a petition under Section 78.33 It is
interesting to note that Hayudini was, in fact, initially excluded by the ERB
as a voter. On November 30, 2012, the ERB issued a certificate confirming
the disapproval of Hayudini’s petition for registration.34 This is precisely
the reason why he needed to file a Petition for Inclusion in the Permanent
List of Voters in Barangay Bintawlan before the MCTC. Thus, when he
stated in his CoC that "he is eligible for said office," Hayudini made a clear
and material misrepresentation as to his eligibility, because he was not, in
fact, registered as a voter in Barangay Bintawlan.
8
Had the COMELEC not given due course to Omar’s petition solely based on
procedural deficiencies, South Ubian would have a mayor who is not even a
registered voter in the locality he is supposed to govern, thereby creating a
ridiculously absurd and outrageous situation. Hence, the COMELEC was
accurate in cancelling Hayudini’s certificate of candidacy. Hayudini likewise
protests that it was a grave error on the part of the COMELEC to have
declared his proclamation null and void when no petition for annulment of
his proclamation was ever filed. What petitioner seems to miss, however, is
that the nullification of his proclamation as a winning candidate is also a
legitimate outcome − a necessary legal consequence − of the cancellation of
his CoC pursuant to Section 78. A CoC cancellation proceeding essentially
partakes of the nature of a disqualification case.35 The cancellation of a CoC
essentially renders the votes cast for the candidate whose certificate of
candidacy has been cancelled as stray votes.36 If the disqualification or CoC
cancellation or denial case is not resolved before the election day, the
proceedings shall continue even after the election and the proclamation of
the winner. Meanwhile, the candidate may be voted for and even be
proclaimed as the winner, but the COMELEC's jurisdiction to deny due
course and cancel his or her CoC continues. This rule likewise applies even
if the candidate facing disqualification has already taken his oath of
office.37 The only exception to this rule is in the case of congressional and
senatorial candidates where the COMELEC ipso jure loses jurisdiction in
favor of either the Senate or the House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal
after the candidates have been proclaimed, taken the proper oath, and also
assumed office.38
never a candidate at all and all his votes were considered stray votes, and
thus, proclaimed the second placer, the only qualified candidate, who
actually garnered the highest number of votes, for the position of Mayor.
We find the factual mileu of the Aratea case applicable in the instant case,
since this is also a case for a petition to deny due course or cancel a
certificate of candidacy. Since Hayudini was never a valid candidate for the
position of the Municipal Mayor of South Ubian, Tawi-Tawi, the votes cast
for him should be considered stray votes, Consequently, the COMELEC
properly proclaimed Salma Omar, who garnered the highest number of votes
in the remaining qualified candidates for the mayoralty post, as the duly-
elected Mayor of South Ubian, Tawi Tawi.
Codilla v. De Venecia case has no application in this case, since it dealt with
a petition for disqualification under Section 68 of the Omnibus Election
Code and not a petition to deny due course or cancel certificate of candidacy
under Section 78 which is the case at bar.
SO ORDERED.
DIOSDADO M. PERALTA
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
PRESBITERO J. VELASCO,
ANTONIO T. CARPIO
JR.
Associate Justice
Associate Justice
MARIANO C. DEL
LUCAS P. BERSAMIN
CASTILLO
Associate Justice
Associate Justice
MARTIN S. VILLARAMA,
ROBERTO A. ABAD
JR.
Associate Justice
Associate Justice
ESTELA M. PERLAS-
BIENVENIDO L. REYES
BERNABE
Associate Justice
Associate Justice
C E R T I F I CAT I O N
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution, I certify that the
conclusions in the above Decision had been reached in consultation before
the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court.
Footnotes
2 Id. at 81-87.
3 Id. at 48-51.
4 Id. at 101.
5 Id. at 90-97.
6 Id. at 216-221.
7 Id. at 149-156.
8 Id. at 169-182.
9 Id. at 157-166.
10 Id. at 222-242.
11 Id. at 81-87.
11
12 Id. at 86.
16 Beluso v. COMELEC, G.R. No. 180711, June 22, 2010, 621 SCRA
450, 456.
17 Emphasis supplied
18 G.R. Nos. 187958, 187961, and 187962, April 7, 2010, 617 SCRA
575, 598.
21 Id.
24 Id. at 442-444.
27 Rollo, p. 85.
29 Rollo, p. 85.
34 Rollo, p. 128.