10.-Bayan-Muna Vs Romulo Digest
10.-Bayan-Muna Vs Romulo Digest
10.-Bayan-Muna Vs Romulo Digest
, Petitioners,
v. ALBERTO ROMULO, in his capacity as Executive Secretary, et al.,
Respondents.
G.R. No. 159618
February 1, 2011
FACTS:
The RP, through Charge affairs Enrique A. Manalo, signed the Rome Statute
which is subject to ratification, acceptance or approval by the signatory states. As of
the filing of the instant petition, only 92 out of the 139 signatory countries appear to
have completed the ratification. The Philippines is not among the 92.
The Court ruled that an exchange of notes falls into the category of inter-
governmental agreements, which is an internationally accepted form of
international agreement. The United Nations Treaty Collections (Treaty Reference
Guide) defines the term as follows:
Authorities are, however, agreed that one is distinct from another for
accepted reasons apart from the concurrence-requirement aspect. As has been
observed by US constitutional scholars, a treaty has greater dignity than an
executive agreement, because its constitutional efficacy is beyond doubt,
a treaty having behind it the authority of the President, the Senate, and the people;
a ratified treaty, unlike an executive agreement, takes precedence over any prior
statutory enactment.
There are no hard and fast rules on the propriety of entering, on a given
subject, into a treaty or an executive agreement as an instrument of international
relations. The primary consideration in the choice of the form of agreement
is the parties intent and desire to craft an international agreement in the
form they so wish to further their respective interests. Verily, the matter of
form takes a back seat when it comes to effectiveness and binding effect of the
enforcement of a treaty or an executive agreement, as the parties in either
international agreement each labor under the pacta sunt servanda principle.
Prescinding from the foregoing premises, the view thus advanced considers the
Agreement inefficacious, unless it is embodied in a treaty duly ratified with the
concurrence of the Senate, the theory being that a Senate- ratified treaty partakes
of the nature of a municipal law that can amend or supersede another law, in this
instance Sec. 17 of RA 9851 and the status of the Rome Statute as constitutive of
enforceable domestic law under Sec. 2, Art. II of the Constitution.
We are unable to lend cogency to the view thus taken. For one, we find that
the Agreement does not amend or is repugnant to RA 9851. For another, the
view does not clearly state what precise principles of law, if any, the
Agreement alters. And for a third, it does not demonstrate in the concrete
how the Agreement seeks to frustrate the objectives of the principles of
law subsumed in the Rome Statute.
Nonetheless, despite the lack of actual domestic legislation, the US notably follows
the doctrine of incorporation. Thus, a person can be tried in the US for an
international crime despite the lack of domestic legislation. The US doubtless
recognizes international law as part of the law of the land, necessarily including
international crimes, even without any local statute. In fact, years later, US courts
would apply international law as a source of criminal liability despite the lack of a
local statute criminalizing it as such.
This rule finds an even stronger hold in the case of crimes against humanity. It has
been held that genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity have attained the
status of customary international law. Some even go so far as to state that these
crimes have attained the status of jus cogens.
The term jus cogens means the compelling law. Corollary, ajus cogensnorm holds
the highest hierarchical position among all other customary norms and principles.
These jus cogens crimes relate to the principle of universal jurisdiction, i.e., any
state may exercise jurisdiction over an individual who commits certain heinous and
widely condemned offenses, even when no other recognized basis for jurisdiction
exists. The rationale behind this principle is that the crime committed is so
egregious that it is considered to be committed against all members of the
international community and thus granting every State jurisdiction over the crime.
Therefore, even with the current lack of domestic legislation on the part of the US, it
still has both the doctrine of incorporation and universal jurisdiction to try these
crimes.