Abundo Sr. V COMELEC G.R. No. 201716 2013
Abundo Sr. V COMELEC G.R. No. 201716 2013
Abundo Sr. V COMELEC G.R. No. 201716 2013
Before the COMELEC could resolve the adverted disqualification case Torres initiated against
Abundo, herein private respondent Ernesto R. Vega commenced a quo warranto action before the RTC-
Br. 43 in Virac, Catanduanes, docketed as Election Case No. 55, to unseat Abundo on essentially the
same grounds Torres raised in his petition to disqualify. The RTC resolved Election Case No. 55 and
declared petitioner ineligible to serve as municipal mayor. The trial court cited Aldovino, Jr. v.
COMELEC (609 SCRA 234), declaring that petitioner’s one year and a month service constitutes a
complete and full service of Abundo’s second term as mayor. Petitioner appealed to the COMELEC
second division; however, the latter affirmed the decision of the RTC. Petitioner appealed to the
COMELEC en banc, but was likewise denied on the contention that the length of the actual service of the
term is immaterial in his case as he was only temporarily unable to discharge his functions as mayor.
Issues:
1. Whether or not the COMELEC En Banc committed grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or
excess of jurisdiction when it declared the arguments in petitioner’s motion for reconsideration as mere
rehash and reiterations of the claims he raised prior to the promulgation of the Resolution.
2 Whether or not the COMELEC En Banc committed grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or
excess of jurisdiction when it declared that petitioner has consecutively served for three terms despite the
fact that he only served the remaining one year and one month of the second term as a result of an
election protest.
Ruling:
1. No, the COMELEC did not err in ruling that the issues in the Motion for Reconsideration are a
rehash of those in the Brief. First, in his Brief, petitioner raised the sole issue of lack of jurisdiction of the
RTC to consider the quo warranto case since the alleged violation of the three-term limit has already been
rejected by the COMELEC First Division in SPA Case No. 10-128 (DC), while in his Motion for
Reconsideration, Abundo raised the similar ground of the conclusiveness of the COMELEC’s finding on
the issue of his qualification to run for the current term. Second, Abundo argued in his Brief that his
situation cannot be equated with the case of preventive suspension as held in Aldovino, Jr. V.
COMELEC, while in his Motion for Reconsideration, he argued before that the almost two years which
he did not sit as mayor during the 2004-2007 term is an interruption in the continuity of his service for the
full term.
2. No. The consecutiveness of what otherwise would have been Abundo’s three successive,
continuous mayorship was effectively broken during the 2004-2007 term when he was initially deprived
of title to, and was veritably disallowed to serve and occupy, an office to which he, after due proceedings,
was eventually declared to have been the rightful choice of the electorate.
The three-term limit rule for elective local officials, a disqualification rule, is found in Section 8,
Article X of the 1987 Constitution, which provides that the “term of office of elective local officials,
except barangay officials, which shall be determined by law, shall be three years and no such official shall
serve for more than three consecutive terms. Voluntary renunciation of the office for any length of time
shall not be considered as an interruption in the continuity of his service for the full term for which he
was elected.” The three-term limit rule is reiterated in Sec. 43(b) of Republic Act No. 7160, or the Local
Government Code of 1991, which states that: “No local elective official shall serve for more than three
(3) consecutive terms in the same position. Voluntary renunciation of the office for any length of time
shall not be considered as an interruption in the continuity of service for the full term for which the
elective official concerned was elected. To constitute a disqualification to run for an elective local office
pursuant to the aforequoted constitutional and statutory provisions, the following requisites must concur:
(1) that the official concerned has been elected for three consecutive terms in the same local government
post; and (2) that he has fully served three consecutive terms. ” It was clearly provided in the
aforementioned provisions that voluntary renunciation of the office by the incumbent elective local
official for any length of time shall not, in determining service for three consecutive terms, be considered
an interruption in the continuity of service for the full term for which the elective official concerned was
elected. However, in the cited case of Aldovino, Jr., the Court stated the observation that the law "does
not textually state that voluntary renunciation is the only actual interruption of service that does not affect
‘continuity of service for a full term’ for purposes of the three-term limit rule."
The following jurisprudence had provided for situations when consecutive terms were considered or
not considered as having been "involuntarily interrupted or broken.”
B. Recall Election
In Adormeo v. Commission on Elections (2002), the Court held that the remainder of Tagarao’s term
after the recall election during which Talaga served as mayor should not be considered for purposes of
applying the three-term limit rule. The Court emphasized that the continuity of Talaga’s mayorship was
disrupted by his defeat during the 1998 elections. Similarly, in Socrates v. Commission on Elections
(2002), the principle behind the three-term limit rule covers only consecutive terms and that what the
Constitution prohibits is a consecutive fourth term. Put a bit differently, an elective local official cannot,
following his third consecutive term, seek immediate reelection for a fourth term, albeit he is allowed to
seek a fresh term for the same position after the election where he could have sought his fourth term but
prevented to do so by reason of the prohibition.
E. Election Protest
It was ruled in the cases Lonzanida v. Commission on Elections (1999) and Dizon v. Commission on
Elections (2009), when a candidate is proclaimed as winner for an elective position and assumes office,
his term is interrupted when he loses in an election protest and is ousted from office, thus disenabling him
from serving what would otherwise be the unexpired portion of his term of office had the protest been
dismissed. Additionally, in the abovementioned case of Socrates, it was held that the break or interruption
need not be for a full term of three years or for the major part of the 3-year term; an interruption for any
length of time, provided the cause is involuntary, is sufficient to break the continuity of service .
Furthermore, when an official is defeated in an election protest and said decision becomes final after said
official had served the full term for said office, then his loss in the election contest does not constitute an
interruption since he has managed to serve the term from start to finish. His full service, despite the
defeat, should be counted in the application of term limits because the nullification of his proclamation
came after the expiration of the term. [Ong v. Alegre (2006), and Rivera III v. Commission on
Elections (2007)]
Finally, in the present case, petitioner cannot be said to have retained title to the mayoralty office as
he was at that time not the duly proclaimed winner who would have the legal right to assume and serve
such elective office. For not having been declared winner yet, Abundo cannot be said to have lost title to
the office since one cannot plausibly lose a title which, in the first place, he did not have. Thus, petitioner
was not entitled to the elective office until the election protest was finally resolved in his favor. Petitioner
is, therefore, eligible for the position of Mayor of Viga, Catanduanes.
Doctrine:
As mentioned, the three-term limit rule for elective local officials is found in Section 8, Article X of
the 1987 Constitution and in Sec. 43(b) of the Local Government Code of 1991. However, the
aforementioned jurisprudence provided for instances not considered as having been “involuntary
interrupted or broken,” to wit: