New Outline Consti I Luardo
New Outline Consti I Luardo
New Outline Consti I Luardo
I. Constitutional Law
-Constitutional law is a term used to designate the law embodied in the constitution and the
legal principles growing out of the interpretation and application made by courts of the
constitution in specific cases.
-Constitution + Jurisprudence
- Political Law:
It is that branch of public law which deals with the organization and operations of the
governmental organs of the State and defines the relations of the State with the
inhabitants of its territory. (PEOPLE VS. PERFECTO, 43 Phil. 887)
A. Definition
-That body of rules and maxims in accordance with which the power of sovereignty are
habitually exercised. (Cooley)
-Puts limitations to the powers of government rather than being the source of powers.
B. Parts
2. Constitution of Liberty - The series of proscriptions setting forth the fundamental civil
and political rights of the citizens and imposing limitations on the powers of government
as a means of securing the enjoyment of those rights.
1. Broad - it provides for the organization of the entire government and covers all
persons and things within the territory of the State and also because it must be
comprehensive enough to provide for every contingency
-It is a supreme law to which all other laws must conform and in accordance with which
all private rights must be determined and all public authority administered.
-If a law violates any norm of the constitution, that law is null and void; it has no effect.
(This is an overstatement, for a law held unconstitutional is not always wholly a nullity)
-It is a proposition too plain to be contested, that the Constitution controls any legislative
act repugnant to it.
The clause “or for three (3) months for every year of the unexpired term, whichever is
less” of Sec 10 Money Claims of RA 8042 Migrant Workers Act of 1995 was already
declared as unconstitutional in the 2009 case of Serrano v Gallant.
VFA is not unconstitutional. Sec 25 of Art XVII disallows foreign military bases,
troops, or facilities in the country, unless the following conditions are sufficiently
met, viz: (a) it must be under a treaty; (b) the treaty must be duly concurred in by
the Senate and, when so required by congress, ratified by a majority of the votes
cast by the people in a national referendum; and (c) recognized as a treaty by the
other contracting state.
There was a concurrence by the Senate through Resolution No. 18 which was in
accordance to the Constitution. The requisite of being “recognized as a treaty”,
according to the court, means that the other contracting parties accept or
acknowledges the agreement as a treaty.
- it is a doctrine in which the Judiciary is vested with the power to annul the acts of
either the legislative or the executive or of both when not conformable to the
fundamental law. [Assoc. of Small Landowners v. Sec. of Agrarian Reform, GR
78742. July 14, 1989]
Case: Manila Prince Hotel v. GSIS, G.R. No. 122156, February 3, 1997
As a general rule, all provisions of the Constitution are self-executing, by virtue that it is
complete in itself and becomes operative without the aid of supplementary or enabling
legislation, or that which supplies sufficient rule by means of which the right it grants may
be enjoyed or protected. Except for provisions which lays down a general principle,
such as those found in Art II of the 1987 Constitution – the right to life and the right to
health, among others.
Sec 10 paragraph 2 of Art XII – the Filipino First Policy is a mandatory, positive command
which is complete in itself and which needs no further guidelines or implementing laws or
rules for its enforcement. From its very words the provision does not require any
legislation to put it in operation.
A. Pre-1987 Constitution
Constitution of 1973
Cases:
Planas v. Comelec, G.R. No. L-35925, January 22, 1973 (a.k.a Plebiscite cases)
The series of cases which sought to prohibit the holding of the plebescite were
eventually dismissed being “moot and acadamic” upon the issuance of Presidential
Proclamation 1102 by President Marcos the Constitution was declared ratified and has
come into force and effect.
A series of cases which challenged the validity of the ratification of the 1973
Constitution which were grounded on the following issues:
c. WoN the people had acquiesced in the New Constitution (with or without valid
ratification)? (Four justices said the people had already accepted the New
Constitution, two said that there can be no free expression by people qualified to
vote of their acceptance or repudiation of the New Constitution under Martial Law,
one said he is not prepared to state that a New Constitution once accepted by the
people must be accorded recognition independently of valid ratifitcation, and three
expressed their lack of knowledge or competence to rule on the question because
under the regime of matial law with free expression of opinions restricted, they ahve
no means of knowing, to the point of judicial certainty, whether the people have
accepted the New Constitution or not).
d. WoN the petitioners are entitiled to relief? (Six justices voted to dismiss the
petition, four were for giving due course to the petitions).
e. WoN the New Constitution is already in force? (Four said yes by virtue of people’s
acceptance of the same, four said they could not with judicial certainty wether or not
the people had accepted the Constitution, and two declared the New Constitution is
not in force)
Phil. Bar Association v. COMELEC, G.R. No. 72915, December 20, 1985
A petition to prohibit the holding of the 1986 snap elections filed at the Supreme Court by
the Phil. Bar Association was dismissed due to considerations other than legality had
already set in. The candidate were in the thick of the campaigning, and the people
were already looking forward to the elections.
Cases:
In Re: Letter of Associate Justice Renato S. Puno, A.M. No. 90-11-2697-CA, June 29,
1992
THE STATE
I. Elements of a State
State v Nation
State v Government
Government is merely an instrumentality of the State throu which the will of the State is
implemented and realized.
A. People
B. Territory
- “The national territory comprises the Philippines archipelago, with all the islands and
waters embraced therein, and all other territories over which the Philippines has
sovereignty or jurisdiction, consisting of its territorial, fluvial, and aerial domains, including
its territorial sea, the seabed, the subsoil, the insular shelves, and other submarine areas.
The waters around, between, and connecting the islands of the archipelago, regardless
of their breadth and dimensions, form part of the internal waters of the Philippines.”
1. The Philippine archipelago with all the islands and waters embraced therein; and
2. All other territories over which the Philippines has sovereignty or jurisdiction.
Case: Province of North Cotabato v. GRP, G.R. No. 183591, October 14, 2008
C. Government
- Government is the agency or instrumentality through the will of the State is formulated,
expressed and realized.
Cases:
Bacani v. National Coconut Corp., G.R. No. L-9657, November 29, 1956
- De Jure government has rightful title but no power or control, either because this
has been withdrawn from it or because it has not yet actually entered into the
exercise thereof.
Cases:
- “The corporate governmental entity through the functions of the government are
exercised throughout the Philippines, including, save as the contrary appears from
the context, various arms through which political authority is made effective in the
Philippines, whether pertaining to autonomous regions, provincial, city, municipal, or
barangay subdivisions or other form of local government.”
4. Government v. Administration
D. Sovereignty
1. Definition
- Legal Sovereignty - The authority which has the power to issue final commands
- Political Sovereignty - The power behind the legal sovereign, or the sum of the
influences that operate upon it
3. Sovereignty as auto-limitation
- “is the property of a state-force due to which it has the exclusive capacity of legal
self-determination and self-restriction” (Jellinek)
- When a foreign power occupies a state and exercises the powers of government,
the political laws of the said state are deemed automatically suspended but the
former government automatically comes to life and will be in force and in effect again
upon the re-establishment of the former government.
Cases:
- One of the important tasks of the government is to act for the State as parens patriae, or
guardian of the rights of people.
- Public policy power of the state to intervene against an abusive or negligent parent,
legal guardian or informal caretaker, and to act as the parent of any child or individual
who is in need of protection.
- the inherent power and authority of the state to provide protection to the persons and
property of the persons non-suijuris
- Non-sui Juris Persons are those who lack the legal capacity to act on his own behalf
like the child or the insane persons.
Cases:
Gov’t v. Monte Piedad, supra (to provide protection to persons and property)
Cabanas v. Pilapil, 58 SCRA 94 (Non-sui Juris Persons)
- The State immunity from suit is not based on constitutional provisions but based on jus
cogens in international law.
Positivist theory – no legal right as against which makes the law or where the right is based
Sociological theory – if you are deprived of the right to suit then the inconvenience of not
able to sue should be subordinated by the higher interest of the public
Consent theory – the state cannot be sued when we approved the 1987 Constitution
A. Basis
- The State may not be sued without its consent” (Art. XVI, Sec. 3, 1987 Constitution).
- There can be no legal right against the authority which makes the law on which the right
depends.
-This immunity is recognized only with respect to the sovereign or public acts of the state,
and cannot be invoked with respect to a private or proprietary acts.
-Cannot be invoked when the foreign state sues in the court of another state -> otherwise
they would be deemed to have submitted itself to the ordinary incidents of procedure and
a counterclaim may be validly set-up against them.
CASES
- money claim against the government, or the state, must first be filed with the
Commission on Audit -> must not involve criminal or administrative cases against
political officers or agencies or instruments, but civil cases
- before a government may be sued, it must be shown that the government has
given it’s consent to be sued either expressly or implied through it’s overt acts ->
e.g. there is actual appropriation of money made for such intended action or
claim.
Sanders v. Veridiano, G.R. No. L-46930, June 10, 1988 (162 SCRA 88)
CASE: Festejo v. Fernando, GR No. L-5156, March 11, 1954 (NOTE: opinion
in Spanish; read dissent of J. Concepcion and the discussion of Cruz to get
an idean what the case is all about)
a. Test
CASES
CASES:
CASES:
Syquia v. Almeda Lopez, 84 Phil 312 (read also the dissent of Juctice
Perfecto)
1. Forms of Consent
a. Express
i. Thru a general law Read Act No. 3083 and C.A. 327, as amended by P.D.
1445)
CASES:
b. Implied
CASES:
Froilan v. Pan Oriental Shipping Cop., GR No. L-6060, Sept 30, 1950
CASES:
CASES:
Ministerio v. CFI, G.R. No. L-31635, August 31, 1971 (40 SCRA 464)
Amigable v. Cuenca, G.R. No. L-26400, February 29, 1972, 43 CRA 360
CASES:
i. Exception
CASE: Shell Philippines Exploration B.V. v. Jalos, G.R. No. 179918, September 8,
2010
CASES: