Chapter 6 and 7 Isagani Cruz Reviewer
Chapter 6 and 7 Isagani Cruz Reviewer
Chapter 6 and 7 Isagani Cruz Reviewer
Chapter 7
Doctrine of Delegation of Powers
I. Delegation of Powers General Rule: Potestas Delegata Non Delegari Potest – what has been
delegated cannot be delegated
A. Principle of non-delegation applies to all 3 major powers of the government
B. Delegation has been more necessary for the legislative power
C. Congress Creating an Administrative Body to promulgate rules and regulations subject to
limitations is an example of delegation (e.g. LTFRB)
II. Permissible Delegation
A. Tariff Powers
The President is granted stand-by or flexible tariff powers
Article VI, Section 28(2) of the Constitution
Expediency to act immediately on certain matters affecting the national economy
B. Emergency Powers
The congress may authorize the President to exercise emergency powers in times of war and
other national emergency
During times of war and calamity, it his highly unlikely that the Congress can form a quorum
to do its business
The president becomes a constitutional dictator
Conditions: War or National Emergency, delegation must be for a limited time only, the
delegation must be for a limited period, the delegation must be subject to strict restrictions
prescribed by congress, the emergency powers must be exercised to carry out national policy
declared by congress
State of emergency does not automatically give the President emergency powers
C. Delegation to the People
The Government is democratic – but is a representative democracy. The people acts through
their representatives.
Referendum – method of submitting an important legislative matter to the direct vote of the
whole people / the power of the electorate to approve or reject a legislation through an
election called for that purpose
Plebiscite – decree of the people. Device to obtain a direct popular vote on a matter of
political importance / electoral process by which an initiative on the Constitution is approved
or rejected by the people.
D. Delegation to the Local Government
Local legislatures are more knowledgable than the national lawmaking body on matters of
purely local concern
Local affairs shall be managed by local authorities
E. Delegation to Administrative Bodies
Power of subordinate legislation is assigned to administrative bodies because of the
proliferation of specialized activities and their attendant peculiar problems
Given the volume and variety of interactions in today’s society, it is doubtful if the legislature
can create laws that will deal with all adequately
For an administrative regulation to be valid, it must be authorized by legislature
III. Tests of Delegation
A. The Completeness Test
The law must be complete in all its essential terms and conditions when it leaves the
legislature so that there will be nothing left for the delegate to do except enforce it.
B. The Sufficient Standard Test
Delegation must be made subject to a sufficient standard.
Sufficient Standard maps out the boundaries of the delegate’s authority by defining the
legislative policy and indicating the circumstances under which it is to be pursued and
effected
Prevents total transference of legislative power from the lawmaking body to the delegate
IV. The Pelaez Case
A. The Completeness and Sufficient Standard Tests should be applied together or concurrently
B. Pelaez contended that Sec. 68 of the Revised Administrative Code empowering the President to
create, merge, divide, abolish or otherwise alter the boundaries of municipal corporations is an
invalid delegation of legislative power