Spexial Topic
Spexial Topic
Spexial Topic
Wade
Facts
Roe (P), a pregnant single woman, brought a class action suit challenging the
constitutionality of the Texas abortion laws. These laws made it a crime to obtain or
attempt an abortion except on medical advice to save the life of the mother.
Other plaintiffs in the lawsuit included Hallford, a doctor who faced criminal
prosecution for violating the state abortion laws; and the Does, a married couple
with no children, who sought an injunction against enforcement of the laws on the
grounds that they were unconstitutional. The defendant was county District
Attorney Wade (D).
A three-judge District Court panel tried the cases together and held that Roe
and Hallford had standing to sue and presented justiciable controversies, and that
declaratory relief was warranted. The court also ruled however that injunctive relief
was not warranted and that the Does complaint was not justiciable.
Roe and Hallford won their lawsuits at trial. The district court held that the
Texas abortion statutes were void as vague and for overbroadly infringing the Ninth
and Fourteenth Amendment rights of the plaintiffs. The Does lost, however, because
the district court ruled that injunctive relief against enforcement of the laws was not
warranted.
The Does appealed directly to the Supreme Court of the United States and
Wade cross-appealed the district courts judgment in favor of Roe and Hallford.
Issues
Do abortion laws that criminalize all abortions, except those required on medical
advice to save the life of the mother, violate the Constitution of the United States?
Does the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States
Constitution protect the right to privacy, including the right to obtain an abortion?
Are there any circumstances where a state may enact laws prohibiting abortion?
Did the fact that Roes pregnancy had already terminated naturally before this case
was decided by the Supreme Court render her lawsuit moot?
Was the district court correct in denying injunctive relief?
Holding and Rule (Blackmun)
Yes. State criminal abortion laws that except from criminality only life-saving
procedures on the mothers behalf, and that do not take into consideration the
stage of pregnancy and other interests, are unconstitutional for violating the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Yes. The Due Process Clause protects the right to privacy, including a womans right
to terminate her pregnancy, against state action.
Yes. Though a state cannot completely deny a woman the right to terminate her
pregnancy, it has legitimate interests in protecting both the pregnant womans
health and the potentiality of human life at various stages of pregnancy.
No. The natural termination of Roes pregnancy did not render her suit moot.
Yes. The district court was correct in denying injunctive relief.
The Court held that, in regard to abortions during the first trimester, the decision
must be left to the judgment of the pregnant womans doctor. In regard to second
trimester pregnancies, states may promote their interests in the mothers health by
regulating abortion procedures related to the health of the mother. Regarding third
trimester pregnancies, states may promote their interests in the potentiality of
human life by regulating or even prohibiting abortion, except when necessary to
preserve the life or health of the mother.
The Supreme Court held that litigation involving pregnancy, which is capable of
repetition, yet evading review, is an exception to the general rule that an actual
controversy must exist at each stage of judicial review, and not merely when the
action is initiated.
The Court held that while 28 U.S.C. 1253 does not authorize a party seeking only
declaratory relief to appeal directly to the Supreme Court, review is not foreclosed
when the case is brought on appeal from specific denial of injunctive relief and the
arguments on the issues of both injunctive and declaratory relief are necessarily
identical.
The Does complaint seeking injunctive relief was based on contingencies which
might or might not occur and was therefore too speculative to present an actual
case or controversy. It was unnecessary for the Court to decide Hallfords case for
injunctive relief because once the Court found the laws unconstitutional, the Texas
authorities were prohibited from enforcing them.
work for him, against his will, as household servant or farm laborer."
Moral restraint is a ground for the issuance of this writ, as where a housemaid is
prevented from leaving her employ because of the influence of the person detaining
her.
Corona vs. United Harbor Pilots Association of the Philippines
[G.R. No. 111953. December 12, 1997.]
Facts:
The Philippine Ports Authority (PPA) was created on 11 July 1974, by virtue of
PD 505. On 23 December 1975, PD 857 was issued revising the PPAs charter.
Pursuant to its power of control, regulation, and supervision of pilots and the
pilotage profession, the PPA promulgated PPA-AO-03-85 2 on 21 March 1985, which
embodied the Rules and Regulations Governing Pilotage Services, the Conduct of
Pilots and Pilotage Fees in Philippine Ports. These rules mandate, inter alia, that
aspiring pilots must be holders of pilot licenses and must train as probationary pilots
in out ports for 3 months and in the Port of Manila for 4 months.
It is only after they have achieved satisfactory performance that they are
given permanent and regular appointments by the PPA itself to exercise harbor
pilotage until they reach the age of 70, unless sooner removed by reason of mental
or physical unfitness by the PPA General Manager. Harbor pilots in every harbor
district are further required to organize themselves into pilot associations which
would make available such equipment as may be required by the PPA for effective
pilotage services. In view of this mandate, pilot associations invested in floating,
communications, and office equipment. In fact, every new pilot appointed by the
PPA automatically becomes a member of a pilot association and is required to pay a
proportionate equivalent equity or capital before being allowed to assume his
duties, as reimbursement to the association concerned of the amount it paid to his
predecessor.
Administrative Law, 2003 ( 8 )Haystacks (Berne Guerrero)
Subsequently, then PPA GM Rogelio A. Dayan issued PPA-AO 04-92 7 on 15
July 1992, whose avowed policy was to instill effective discipline and thereby afford
better protection to the port users through the improvement of pilotage services.
This was implemented by providing therein that all existing regular appointments
which have been previously issued either by the Bureau of Customs or the PPA shall
remain valid up to 31 December 1992 only and that all appointments to harbor
pilot positions in all pilotage districts shall, henceforth, be only for a term of 1 year
from date of effectivity of subject to yearly renewal or cancellation by the Authority
after conduct of a rigid evaluation of performance. On 12 August 1992, the United
Harbor Pilots Association and the Manila Pilots Association, through Capt. Alberto C.
Compas, questioned PPA-AO 04-92 before the DOTC, but they were informed by
then DOTC Secretary Jesus B. Garcia that the matter of reviewing, recalling or
annulling PPAs administrative issuances lies exclusively with its Board of Directors
as its governing body. Meanwhile, on 31 August 1992, the PPA issued Memorandum
Order 08-92 8 which laid down the criteria or factors to be considered in the
reappointment of harbor pilots viz.:
(1) Qualifying Factors: safety record and physical/mental medical exam report and,
(2)Criteria for Evaluation: promptness in servicing vessels, compliance with PPA
Pilotage Guidelines, number of years as a harbor pilot, average GRT of vessels
serviced as pilot, awards/commendations as harbor pilot, and age. The Associations
reiterated their request for the suspension of the implementation of PPA-AO 04-92,
but Secretary Garcia insisted on his position that the matter was within the
jurisdiction of the Board of Directors of the PPA. Compas appealed the ruling to the
Office of the President (OP), reiterating his arguments before the DOTC. On 23
December 1992, the OP issued an order directing the PPA to hold in abeyance the
implementation of PPA-AO 04-92. In its answer, the PPA countered that said
administrative order was issued in the exercise of its administrative control and
supervision over harbor pilots, and it, along with its implementing guidelines, was
intended to restore order in the ports and to improve the quality of port services. On
17 March 1993, the OP, through then Assistant Executive Secretary for Legal Affairs
Renato C. Corona, dismissed the appeal/petition and lifted the restraining order
issued earlier. He concluded that PPAAO 04-92 applied to all harbor pilots and, for all
intents and purposes, was not the act of Dayan, but of the PPA, which was merely
implementing Section.6 of PD No .857, mandating it to control, regulate and
supervise pilotage and conduct of pilots in any port district.
Consequently, the Associations filed a petition for certiorari, prohibition and
injunction with prayer for the issuance of a temporary restraining order and
damages, before Branch 6 of the RTC Manila (Civil Case 93- 65673). On 6
September 1993, the trial court rendered judgment holding that the PPA, DOTC, and
OP have acted in excess of jurisdiction and with grave abuse of discretion and in a
capricious, whimsical and arbitrary manner in promulgating PPA Administrative
Order 04-92 including all its implementing Memoranda, Circulars and Orders,
declaring that PPA Administrative Order 04-92 and its implementing Circulars and
Orders are null and void. From this decision, the PPA, DOTC and OP elevated their
case to the Supreme Court on certiorari.
The Supreme Court dismissed the petition, and affirmed the assailed decision of the
court a quo dated 6 September 1993, without pronouncement as to costs.
1. Pilotage a profession, a property right; Withdrawal or alteration of right requires
due process
The Bureau of Customs, the precursor of the PPA, recognized pilotage as a
profession and, therefore, a property right under Callanta v. Carnation Philippines,
Inc. Thus, abbreviating the term within which that privilege may be exercised would
be an interference with the property rights of the harbor pilots.
Consequently, any withdrawal or alteration of such property right must be strictly
made in accordance with the constitutional mandate of due process of law. This was
apparently not followed by the PPA when it did not conduct public hearings prior to
the issuance of PPA-AO 04-92; the Associations allegedly learned about it only after
its publication in the newspapers. Indeed, PPA-AO 04-92 was issued in stark
disregard of the pilots rights against deprivation of property without due process of
law.
2. Due process clause of the Constitution; Conditions that concur to fall within aegis
of provision Administrative Law, 2003 ( 9 )Haystacks (Berne Guerrero)
Section 1 of the Bill of Rights lays down what is known as the due process clause
of the
Constitution, viz.: No person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without
due process of law,.. In order to fall within the aegis of this provision, two
conditions must concur, namely, that there is a deprivation and that such
deprivation is done without proper observance of due process.
3. Procedural due process
When one speaks of due process of law, however, a distinction must be made
between matters of procedure and matters of substance. In essence, procedural
due process refers to the method or manner by which the law is enforced, while
substantive due process requires that the law itself, not merely the procedures by
which the law would be enforced, is fair, reasonable, and just.
4. Essence of due process of law; Lumiqued v. Exevea
As long as a party was given the opportunity to defend his interests in due course,
he cannot be said to have been denied due process of law, for this opportunity to be
heard is the very essence of due process.
Moreover, this constitutional mandate is deemed satisfied if a person is granted an
opportunity to seek reconsideration of the action or ruling complained of (Lumiqued
v. Hon. Exevea). In the present case, the Associations questioned PPA-AO 04-92 no
less than 4 times before the matter was finally elevated to the Supreme Court.
5. Coast Guard represented in the PPA; No consultation required of Coast Guard as
there is no naval defense involved The MARINA, which took over the licensing
function of the Philippine Coast Guard (issuing the licenses of pilots after
administering the pilots examinations), was duly represented in the Board of
Directors of the PPA. There being no matters of naval defense involved in the
issuance of the administrative order, the Philippine Coast Guard need not be
consulted.
6. Notice and hearing not required in agencys performance of executive or
legislative functions
The fact that the pilots themselves were not consulted in any way taint the validity
of the administrative order. As a general rule, notice and hearing, as the
fundamental requirements of procedural due process, are essential only when an
administrative body exercises its quasi-judicial function. In the performance of its
executive or legislative functions, such as issuing rules and regulations, an
administrative body need not comply with the requirements of notice and hearing.
7. Licensure and license defined
Licensure is the granting of license especially to practice a profession. It is also
the system of granting licenses (as for professional practice) in accordance with
established standards. A license is a right or permission granted by some
competent authority to carry on a business or do an act which, without such license,
would be illegal.
8. Pilotage as profession practiced only by duly licensed individuals; Vested right
Pilotage, just like other professions, may be practiced only by duly licensed
individuals. Before harbor pilots can earn a license to practice their profession, they
literally have to pass through the proverbial eye of a needle by taking, not one but
five examinations, each followed by actual training and practice. The five
government professional examinations, namely,
(1) For Third Mate and after which he must work, train and practice on board a
vessel for at least a year;
(2) For Second Mate and after which he must work, train and practice for at least a
year;
(3) For chief Mate and after which he must work, train and practice for at least a
year;
(4) For a Master Mariner and after which he must work as Captain of vessels for at
least 2 years to qualify for an examination to be a pilot; and finally, of course, that
given for pilots. Their license is granted in the form of an appointment which allows
them to engage in pilotage until they retire at the age 70 years.
This is a vested right. Administrative Law, 2003 ( 10 )Haystacks (Berne Guerrero)
9. PPA-AO 04-92 unduly restrict right of pilots to enjoy their profession
Under the terms of PPA-AO 04-92, it is readily apparent that PPA-AO 04-92 unduly
restricts the right of harbor pilots to enjoy their profession before their compulsory
retirement. Under the new issuance, they have to contend with an annual
cancellation of their license which can be temporary or permanent depending on
the outcome of their performance evaluation. Veteran pilots and neophytes alike are
suddenly confronted with one-year terms which ipso facto expire at the end of that
period. Renewal of their license is now dependent on a rigid evaluation of
performance which is conducted only after the license has already been cancelled.
Hence, the use of the term renewal It is this pre-evaluation cancellation which
primarily makes PPA-AO 04-92 unreasonable and constitutionally infirm. In a real
sense, it is a deprivation of property without due process of law.
10. PPA-AO 04-92 a surplusage, an unnecessary enactment; must be struck down
PPA-AO 04-92 and PPA-MO 08-92 are already covered by PPA-AO 03-85, which is still
operational. PPA-AO 04-92 is a surplusage and, therefore, an unnecessary
enactment. PPA-AO 03-85 is a comprehensive order setting forth the Rules and
Regulations Governing Pilotage Services, the Conduct of Pilots and Pilotage Fees in
Philippine Ports. It provides, inter alia, for the qualification, appointment,
performance evaluation, disciplining and removal of harbor pilots matters which
are duplicated in PPA-AO 04-92 and its implementing memorandum order. Since it
adds nothing new or substantial, PPA-AO 04-92 must be struck down.
11. PPA GM Dayan presumed to have acted in accordance with law
The Associations insinuation that then PPA GM Dayan was responsible for the
issuance of the questioned administrative order may have some factual basis; after
all, power and authority were vested in his office to propose rules and regulations.
The trial courts finding of animosity between him and the former might likewise
have a grain of truth. Yet the number of cases filed in court between Associations
and Dayan cannot certainly be considered the primordial reason for the issuance of
PPA-AO 04-92. In the absence of proof to the contrary, Dayan should be presumed
to have acted in accordance with law and the best of professional motives. In any
event, his actions are certainly always subject to scrutiny by higher administrative
authorities.
PBMEO were found guilty of bargaining in bad faith. Their motion for reconsideration
was subsequently denied by the Court of Industrial Relations for being filed two
days late.
Issue:
Whether or not the workers who joined the strike violated the CBA.
Held:
No. While the Bill of Rights also protects property rights, the primacy of human
rights over property rights is recognized. Because these freedoms are "delicate and
vulnerable, as well as supremely precious in our society" and the "threat of
sanctions may deter their exercise almost as potently as the actual application of
sanctions," they "need breathing space to survive," permitting government
regulation only "with narrow specificity." Property and property rights can be lost
thru prescription; but human rights are imprescriptible. In the hierarchy of civil
liberties, the rights of free expression and of assembly occupy a
preferred position as they are essential to the preservation and vitality of our civil
and political institutions; and such priority "gives these liberties the sanctity and the
sanction not permitting dubious intrusions."
The freedoms of speech and of the press as well as of peaceful assembly and
of petition for redress of grievances are absolute when directed against public
officials or "when exercised in relation to our right to choose the men and women by
whom we shall be governed.
speaking an action in rem yet it partakes of that nature and is substantially such.
The expression "action in rem" is, in its narrow application, used only with reference
to certain proceedings in courts of admiralty wherein the property alone is treated
as responsible for the claim or obligation upon which the proceedings are based.
The action quasi rem differs from the true action in rem in the circumstance that in
the former an individual is named as defendant, and the purpose of the proceeding
is to subject his interest therein to the obligation or lien burdening the property. All
proceedings having for their sole object the sale or other disposition of the property
of the defendant, whether by attachment, foreclosure, or other form of remedy, are
in a general way thus designated. The judgment entered in these proceedings is
conclusive only between the parties.
It is true that in proceedings of this character, if the defendant for whom publication
is made appears, the action becomes as to him a personal action and is conducted
as such. This, however, does not affect the proposition that where the defendant
fails to appear the action is quasi in rem; and it should therefore be considered with
reference to the principles governing actions in rem.
motion for a new trial and the entire record of this case shall be remanded to the
CIR, with instruction that it reopen the case, receive all such evidence as maybe
relevant, and otherwise proceed in accordance with the requirements set forth.
1. The Court of Industrial Relations; Departure from rigid concept of separ
ation of powers
The Court of Industrial Relations is a special court whose functions are specifically
stated in the law of its creation (CA 103). It is more an administrative board than a
part of the integrated judicial system of the nation. It is not intended to be a mere
receptive organ of the Government. Unlike a court of justice which is essentially
passive, acting only when its jurisdiction is invoked and deciding only cases that are
presented to it by the parties litigant, the function of the Court of Industrial
Relations, as will appear from perusal of its organic law, is more active, affirmative
and dynamic. It not only exercises judicial or quasi-judicial functions
in the determination of disputes between employers and employees but its function
s are far more comprehensive and extensive. It has jurisdiction over the entire
Philippines, to consider, investigate, decide, settle any question, matter controversy
or dispute arising between, and/or affecting, employers and employees or laborers,
and landlords and tenants or farm-laborers, and regulate the relations between
them, subject to, and in accordance with, the provisions of CA 103 (section 1). It
shall take cognizance for purposes of prevention, arbitration, decision and
settlement, of any industrial or agricultural dispute causing or likely to cause a
strike or lockout, arising from differences as regards wage shares or compensation,
hours of labor or conditions of tenancy or employment, between employers and
employees or laborers and between landlords and tenants or farm-laborers,
provided that the number of employees, laborers or tenants or farm-laborers
involved exceeds thirty, and such industrial or agricultural dispute is submitted to
the Court by the Secretary of Labor or by any or both of the parties to the
controversy and certified by the Secretary of Labor as existing and proper to be
death with by the Court for the sake of public interest. (Section A, ibid.) It shall,
before hearing the dispute and in the course of such hearing, endeavor to reconcile
the parties and induce them to settle the dispute by amicable agreement.
(Paragraph 2, section 4, ibid.) When directed by the President of the Philippines, it
shall investigate and study all pertinent facts related to the industry concerned or to
the industries established in a designated locality, with a view to determining the
necessity and fairness of fixing and adopting for such industry or locality a minimum
wage or share of laborers or tenants, or a maximum canon or rental to be paid by
the inquilinos or tenants or lessees to landowners. (Section 5, ibid.) In fine, it may
appeal to voluntary arbitration in the settlement of industrial disputes; may employ
mediation or conciliation for that purpose, or recur to the more effective system of
official investigation and compulsory
arbitration in order to determine specific controversies between labor and capital in
industry and in agriculture. There is in reality here a mingling of executive and
judicial functions, which is a departure from the rigid doctrine of the separation of
governmental powers.
2. The CIR free from rigidity of certain procedure requirements,
but not free
to ignore ordisregard fundamental and essential requirements of due proc
ess involving proceedings of administrative character
The CIR is not narrowly constrained by technical rules of procedure, and the Act
requires it to act according to justice and equity and substantial merits of the case,
without regard to technicalities or legal forms and shall not be bound by any
technical rules of legal evidence but may inform its mind in such manner as it may
deem just and equitable. (Section 20, CA 103.) It shall not be restricted to the
delegate to such board or public official such powers and functions as the CIR may
deem necessary, but such delegation shall not affect the exercise of the Court itself
of any of its powers (Section 10)
f. The CIR or any of its judges, therefore, must act on its or his own independent
consideration of the law and facts of the controversy, and not simply accept the
views of a subordinate in arriving at a decision. It may be that the volume of work is
such that it is literally impossible for the titular heads of the CIR personally to
decide all controversies coming before them. There is no statutory authority to
authorize examiners or other subordinates to render final decision, with right to
appeal to board or commission, to solve the difficulty.
g. The CIR should, in all controversial questions, render its decision in such a
manner that the parties to the proceeding can know the various issues involved,
and the reasons for the decisions rendered. The performance of this duty is
inseparable from the authority conferred upon it.
4. New trial granted under circumstances
The interest of justice would be better served if the movant is given opportunity to
present at the hearing the documents referred to in his motion and such other
evidence as may be relevant to the main issue involved. The legislation which
created the Court of Industrial Relations and under which it acts is new. The failure
to grasp the fundamental issue involved is not entirely attributable to the parties
adversely affected by the result
answer. Zafaralla Committee was also created and recommends private respondent
for withdrawal of her degree after establishing the facts the there were massive
lifting from published sources and the private respondent also admits herself of
being guilty of plagiarism. On the basis of the report and recommendation of the
University Council, the Board of Regents send a letter to inform private respondent
that it was resolved by majority to withdraw your doctorates degree. On August 10,
1995, private respondent then filed a petition for mandamus with a prayer for a writ
of preliminary mandatory injunction and damages to RTC QC.
She alleged that petitioners had unlawfully withdrawn her degree without
justification and without affording her procedural due process. She prayed
that petitioners be ordered to restore her degree and to pay her P500, 000.00
as moral and exemplary damages and P1, 500,000.00 as compensation for lost
earnings.
RTC dismissed for lack of merit. The Court of Appeals reversed the lower courts
decision and ordered to restore her doctorates degree.
Issue/s:
1. Whether or not the Court of Appeals erred in granting the writ of mandamus and
ordering petitioners to restore doctoral degree.
2. Whether or not the court of appeals erred in holding that respondents doctoral
degree cannot be recalled without violating her right to enjoyment of intellectual
property and to justice and equity. Held/Ruling:
The decision of Court of Appeals was reversed.
1. Yes. The court of appeals decisions was based on grounds that the private
respondent was denied of due process and that she graduated and no longer in the
ambit of disciplinary powers of
UP. In all investigations held by the different committee assigned to investigate the
charges, the privaterespondent was heard on her defense. In fact she was informed
in writing about the charges and was provided with a copy from the investigating
committee. She was asked to submit her explanation which
sheforwarded. Private respondent also discussed her case with the UP Chancellor a
nd Zafaralla Committee during their meetings. She was given the opportunity to be
heard and explain her side but failed to refute the charges of plagiarism against her.
The freedom of a university does not terminate upon the "graduation" of a student,
as the Court of Appeals held because the "graduation" of such a student
that is in question. The investigation began before graduation. She was able to
graduate because there were many investigations conducted before the
Board finally decided that she should not have been allowed to graduate.
2. Yes. The court held that academic freedom is guaranteed to institutions of higher
learning by Art XIV of the 1987 Constitution. This freedom includes deciding whom a
university will confer degrees on. If the degree is procured by error or fraud then
the Board of Regents, subject to due process being followed, may cancel that
degree.
Art. XIV, Section 5 par. 2 of the Constitution provides that "academic freedom
shall be enjoyed in all institutions of higher learning."
It is a freedom granted to "institutions of higher learning" which is thus given "a
wide sphere of authority certainly extending to the choice of students." If such
institution of higher learning can decide who can and who cannot study in it, it
certainly can also determine on whom it can confer the honor and distinction
of being its graduates
Facts:
Dumlao was the former governor of Nueva Vizcaya. He has retired from his office
and he has been receiving retirement benefits therefrom. He filed for reelection to
the same office for the 1980 local elections. On the other hand, BP 52 was passed
(par 1 thereof) providing disqualification for the likes of Dumlao. Dumlao assailed
the BP averring that it is class legislation hence unconstitutional. His petition was
joined by Atty. Igot and Salapantan Jr. These two however have different issues. The
suits of Igot and Salapantan are more of a taxpayers suit assailing the other
provisions of BP 52 regarding the term of office of the elected officials, the length of
the campaign and the provision barring persons charged for crimes may not run for
public office and that the filing of complaints against them and after preliminary
investigation would already disqualify them from office. In general, Dumlao
invoked equal protection in the eye of the law.
ISSUE:
Whether or not the there is cause of action.
HELD:
The SC pointed out the procedural lapses of this case for this case would never have
been merged. Dumlaos cause is different from Igots. They have separate issues.
Further, this case does not meet all the requisites so that itd be eligible for judicial
review. There are standards that have to be followed in the exercise of the function
of judicial review, namely: (1) the existence of an appropriate case; (2) an interest
personal and substantial by the party raising the constitutional question; (3) the
plea that the function be exercised at the earliest opportunity; and (4) the necessity
that the constitutional question be passed upon in order to decide the case. In this
case, only the 3rd requisite was met. The SC ruled however that the provision
barring persons charged for crimes may not run for public office and that the filing
of complaints against them and after preliminary investigation would already
disqualify them from office as null and void.
The assertion that Sec 4 of BP 52 is contrary to the safeguard of equal protection is
neither well taken. The constitutional guarantee of equal protection of the laws is
subject to rational classification. If the groupings are based on reasonable and real
differentiations, one class can be treated and regulated differently from another
class. For purposes of public service, employees 65 years of age, have been validly
classified differently from younger employees. Employees attaining that age are
subject to compulsory retirement, while those of younger ages are not so
compulsorily retirable.
In respect of election to provincial, city, or municipal positions, to require that
candidates should not be more than 65 years of age at the time they assume office,
if applicable to everyone, might or might not be a reasonable classification
although, as the Solicitor General has intimated, a good policy of the law should be
to promote the emergence of younger blood in our political elective echelons. On
the other hand, it might be that persons more than 65 years old may also be good
elective local officials.
Retirement from government service may or may not be a reasonable
disqualification for elective local officials. For one thing, there can also be retirees
from government service at ages, say below 65. It may neither be reasonable to
disqualify retirees; aged 65, for a 65-year old retiree could be a good local official
just like one, aged 65, who is not a retiree.
But, in the case of a 65-year old elective local official (Dumalo), who has retired
from a provincial, city or municipal office, there is reason to disqualify him from
running for the same office from which he had retired, as provided for in the
challenged provision.
Tablarin vs Guiterrez
Facts: The petitioners seek admission into colleges or schools of medicine.
However the petitioners either did not take or did not successfully take the National
Medical Admission Test (NMAT). Republic Act 2382 as amended by R.A. 4224 and
5946, known as the Medical Act of 1959 created, among others, the Board of
Medical Education (BME) whose functions include "to determine and
prescribe requirements for admission into a recognized college of medicine" (Sec. 5
(a). Section 7 of the same Act requires from applicants to present a certificate
of eligibility for entrance (cea) to medical school from the BME. MECS Order No. 52,
s. 1985, issued by the then Minister of Education, Culture and Sports, established a
uniform admission test called National Medical Admission Test as additional
requirement for issuance of a certificate of eligibility.
Petitioners then filed with the RTC a petition for Declaratory Judgment and
Prohibition with a prayer Temporary Restraining Order and Preliminary Injunction
seeking to enjoin the Sec. of educ, BME from enforcing Sec. 5(a) and (f) of R.A. 4224
and MECS Order no. 2 and from requiring the taking and passing of the NMAT as
condition for securing (cea).
Issue: Whether or not Sec. 5(a) and (f) of R.A. 4224 and MECS Order no. 2 violate
the constitution as they prescribe an unfair, unreasonable and inequitable
requirement
Held: The legislative and administrative provisions impugned in this case constitute
a valid exercise of the police power of the state.
Perhaps the only issue that needs some consideration is whether there is some
reasonable relation between the prescribing of passing the NMAT as a condition
for admission to medical school on the one hand, and the securing of the health and
safety of the general community, on the other hand. This question is perhaps most
usefully approached by recalling that the regulation of the practice of medicine in all
its branches has long been recognized as a reasonable method of protecting the
health and safety of the public. That the power to regulate and control the practice
of medicine includes the power to regulate admission to the ranks of those
authorized to practice medicine, is also well recognized. Thus, legislation and
administrative regulations requiring those who wish to practice medicine first to
take and pass medical board examinations have long ago been recognized as valid
exercises of governmental power. Similarly, the establishment of minimum medical
educational requirements-i.e., the completion of prescribed courses in a recognized
medical school-for admission to the medical profession, has also been sustained as
a legitimate exercise of the regulatory authority of the state. What we have before
us in the instant case is closely related: the regulation of access to medical schools.
MECS Order No. 52, s. 1985, articulates the rationale of regulation of this type: the
improvement of the professional and technical quality of the graduates of medical
schools, by upgrading the quality of those admitted to the student body of the
medical schools. That upgrading is sought by selectivity in the process of admission,
selectivity consisting, among other things, of limiting admission to those who
exhibit in the required degree the aptitude for medical studies and eventually for
medical practice. The need to maintain, and the difficulties of maintaining, high
standards in our professional schools in general, and medical schools in particular,
in the current state of our social and economic development, are widely known.
The Court believes that the government is entitled to prescribe an admission test
like the NMAT as a means of achieving its stated objective of "upgrading the
selection of applicants into [our] medical schools" and of "improv[ing] the quality of
medical education in the country."
ISSUE:
Whether or not there has been a violation of equal protection before the law.
HELD:
The SC ruled that there is a violation of the equal protection clause. The judiciary
needs the franking privilege as so badly as it is vital to its operation. Evident to that
need is the high expense allotted to the judiciarys franking needs. The Postmaster
cannot be sustained in contending that the removal of the franking privilege from
the judiciary is in order to cut expenditure. This is untenable for if the Postmaster
would intend to cut expenditure by removing the franking privilege of the judiciary,
then they should have removed the franking privilege all at once from all the other
departments. If the problem of the respondents is the loss of revenues from the
franking privilege, the remedy is to withdraw it altogether from all agencies of the
government, including those who do not need it. The problem is not solved by
retaining it for some and withdrawing it from others, especially where there is no
substantial distinction between those favored, which may or may not need it at all,
and the Judiciary, which definitely needs it. The problem is not solved by violating
the Constitution.
The equal protection clause does not require the universal application of the laws on
all persons or things without distinction. This might in fact sometimes result in
unequal protection, as where, for example, a law prohibiting mature books to all
persons, regardless of age, would benefit the morals of the youth but violate the
liberty of adults. What the clause requires is equality among equals as determined
according to a valid classification. By classification is meant the grouping of persons
or things similar to each other in certain particulars and different from all others in
these same particulars.
In lumping the Judiciary with the other offices from which the franking privilege has
been withdrawn, Sec 35 has placed the courts of justice in a category to which it
does not belong. If it recognizes the need of the President of the Philippines and the
members of Congress for the franking privilege, there is no reason why it should not
recognize a similar and in fact greater need on the part of the Judiciary for such
privilege.