GROUP2 (Subgroup 2) RPH 102
GROUP2 (Subgroup 2) RPH 102
GROUP2 (Subgroup 2) RPH 102
SECOND SUBGROUP:
ESPINUEVA, MARY SHALOM H.
DULDULAO, LYKA LIZETH G.
TABIOS, MIRYAN KAYE
HABON, RENO H.
o Malolos Constitution (1935)
o Commonwealth Constitution (1935)
o 1973 Constitution
o 1987 Constitution
Introduction;
CONSTITUTION
o The branch public law which deals with constitution;
their nature, formation, amendment and
interpretation.
o It is also the law embodied in the constitution as well
as the principles growing out of the interpretation
and application made by the courts, specifically the
Supreme Court.
It was formally established with Emilio Aguinaldo as
President by proclamation of the Malolos Constitution
on January 21, 1899, in Malolos, Bulacan,
succeeding the previous Revolutionary Government
of the Philippines. It endured until 1901.
MALOLOS CONSTITUTION (1899)
Preamble
Title I
THE REPUBLIC
Article 1. The political association of all Filipinos constitutes a
nation, whose state shall be known
as the Philippine Republic.
Article 2. The Philippine Republic is free and independent.
Article 3. Sovereignty resides exclusively in the people.
Title II
THE GOVERNMENT
Article 4. The Government of the Republic is popular,
representative, alternative, and
responsible, and shall exercise three distinct powers: namely, the
legislative, the executive, and the judicial. Any two or more of
these three powers shall never be united in one person or
cooperation, nor the legislative power vested in one single
individual. Considered, for this purpose, as part of Philippine
territory.
Title III
RELIGION
Article 5. The State recognizes the freedom and equality of all
religions, as well as the separation of the Church and the State.
Title IV
THE FILIPINOS AND THEIR NATIONAL AND INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS
Article 6. The following are Filipinos:
1. All persons born in the Philippine territory. A vessel of
Philippine registry is considered, for this purpose, as part of
Philippine territory.
2. Children of a Filipino father or mother, although born
outside of the Philippines.
3. Foreigners who have obtained certification of naturalization
4. Those who, without such certificate, have acquired a domicile in
any town within Philippine territory. It is understood that domicile is
acquired by uninterrupted residence for two years in any locality
within Philippine territory, with an open abode and known
occupation, and contributing to all the taxes imposed by the Nation.
The condition of being a Filipino is lost in accordance with law.
Article 7. No Filipino or foreigner shall be detained nor imprisoned
except for the commission of a crime and in accordance with law.
Article 8. All persons detained shall be discharged or delivered
to the judicial authority within 24 hours following the act of
detention.
All detentions shall be without legal effect, unless the arrested
person is duly prosecuted within 72 hours after delivery to a
competent court. The accused shall be duly notified of such
proceeding within the same period.
Article 10. No one shall enter the dwelling house of any Filipino
or a foreigner residing in the Philippines without his consent
except in urgent cases of fire, inundation, earthquake or similar
dangers, or by reason of unlawful aggression from within, or in
order to assist a person therein who cries for help. Outside of
these cases, the entry into the dwelling house of any Filipino or
foreign resident in the Philippines or the search of his papers and
effects can only be decreed by a competent court and
executed only in the daytime.
The search of papers and effects shall be made always in the
presence of the person searched or of a member of his family
and, in their absence, of two witnesses resident of the same
place. However, when a criminal caught in fraganti should take
refuge in his dwelling house, the authorities in pursuit may enter
into it, only for the purpose of making an arrest. If a criminal
should take refuge in the dwelling house of a foreigner, the
consent of a latter must first be obtained.
Article 11. No Filipino shall be compelled to change his
residence or domicile except by virtue of a final judgment.
Article 12. In no case may correspondence confided to the post office
be detained or opened by government authorities, nor any
telegraphic or telephonic message detained. However, by virtue of a
competent court, correspondence may be detained and opened in
the presence of the sender.
Article 13. All orders of imprisonment, of search of a dwelling house,
or detention of written correspondence, telegraph or telephone,
must be justified. When an order lacks this requisite, or when the
grounds on which the act was founded is proven in court to be
unlawful or manifestly insufficient, the person to be detained or
whose imprisonment has not been ratified within the period
prescribed in Art. 9, or whose correspondence has been
detained, shall have the right to recover damages.
Article 14. No Filipino shall be prosecuted or sentenced, except by
a judge or court of proper jurisdiction and according to the
procedure prescribed by law.
Article 15. Except in the cases provided by the Constitution, all
persons detained or imprisoned not in accordance with legal
formalities shall be released upon his own petition or upon petition
of another person. The law shall determine the manner of
proceeding summarily in this instance, as well as the personal
and pecuniary penalties which shall be imposed upon the person
who ordered, executed or to be executed the illegal detention or
imprisonment.
Article 16. No one shall be temporarily or permanently deprived of
rights or disturbed in his enjoyment thereof, except by virtue of
judicial sentence. The officials who, under any pretext whatsoever,
should violate this provision, shall be personally liable for the
damages caused.
Article 17. No one shall be deprived of his property by expropriation
except on grounds of public necessity and benefit, previously
declared and justified by proper authorities, and indemnifying the
owner thereof prior to expropriation.
Article 18. No one shall be obliged to pay any public tax which had
not been approved by the National Assembly or by local popular
governments legally so authorized, and which is not in the
manner prescribed by the law.
Article 19. No Filipino who is in full enjoyment of his civil or political
rights, shall be impeded in the free exercise of said rights.
Article 20. Neither shall any Filipino be deprived:
1. Of the right to freely express his ideas or opinions, orally or in
writing, through the use of the press or other similar means.
2. Of the right of association for purposes of human life and which
are not contrary to public morals; and lastly
3. Of the right to send petitions to the authorities, individually or
collectively. The right of petition shall not be exercised through any
kind of armed force.
Article 21. The exercise of the rights provided for in the
preceding article shall be subject to general provisions
regulating the same.
Article 22. Crimes committed on the occasion of the exercise of
rights provided for in this title, shall be punished by the courts in
accordance with the laws.
Article 23. Any Filipino may establish and maintain institutions of
learning, in accordance with the laws authorizing them. Public
education shall be free and obligatory in all schools of the nation.
Article 24. Foreigners may freely reside in Philippine territory,
subject to legal dispositions regulating the matter; may engage
in any occupation or profession for the exercise of which no
special license is required by law to be issued by the national
authorities.
Article 25. No Filipino who is in full enjoyment of his political and
civil rights shall be impeded in his right to travel freely abroad or in
his right to transfer his residence or possessions to another
country, except as to his obligations to contribute to military service
or the maintenance of public taxes.
Article 26. No foreigner who has not been naturalized may exercise
in the Philippines any office which carries with it any authority or
jurisdictional powers.
Article 27. All Filipinos are obliged to defend his country with arms
when called upon by law, and to contribute to the expenses of the
State in proportion to his means.
Article 28. The enumeration of the rights provided for in this title
does not imply the denial of other rights not mentioned.
Article 29. The prior authorization to prosecute a public official in the
ordinary courts is not necessary, whatever may be the crime
committed. A superior order shall not exempt a public official from
liability in the cases which constitute apparent and clear violations of
constitutional precepts. In others, the agents of the law shall only
be exempted if they did not exercise the authority.
Article 30. The guarantees provided for in Articles 7, 8, 9, 10,
and 11 and paragraphs 1 and 2 of Article 20 shall not be
suspended, partially or wholly, in any part of the Republic,
except temporarily and by authority of law, when the security
of the State in extraordinary circumstances so demands.
When promulgated in any territory where the suspension applies,
there shall be a special law which shall govern during the period of
the suspension, according to the circumstances prevailing.
The law of suspension as well as the special law to govern shall be
approved by the National Assembly, and in case the latter is in
recess, the Government shall have the power to decree the same
jointly with the Permanent Commission, without prejudice to
convoking the Assembly without the least delay and report to it
what had been done. However, any suspension made shall not
affect more rights than those mentioned in the first paragraph
of this article nor authorize the Government to banish or deport
from the Philippines any Filipino
Article 31. In the Republic of the Philippines, no one shall be judged
by a special law nor by special tribunals. No person or corporation
may enjoy privileges or emoluments which are not in compensation
for public service rendered and authorized by law. War and marine
laws shall apply only for crimes and delicts which have intimate
relation to military or naval discipline.
Article 32. No Filipino shall establish laws on primogeniture, nor
institutions restrictive of property rights, nor accept honors,
decorations, or honorific titles or nobility from foreign nations
without the consent of the Government.
Neither shall the Government establish in the Republic
institutions mentioned in the preceding paragraph, nor confer
honors, decorations, or honorific titles of nobility to any Filipino.