Calleja Additional
Calleja Additional
Calleja Additional
that the Court may exercise its power of judicial review if the following requisites are present:
(2) A personal and substantial interest of the party raising the constitutional question;
(3) The exercise of judicial review is pleaded at the earliest opportunity; and
(4) The constitutional question raised is the very lis mota of the case.96
The first requisite of actual case or controversy is complied with when the matter before the court
involves a "conflict of legal rights, an assertion of opposite legal claims susceptible of judicial
resolution."97 In Falcis III v. Civil Registrar General,98 it was explained that the Court does not
generally act on petitions which merely allege that the assailed law is unconstitutional:
It is not enough that laws or regulations have been passed or are in effect when their
constitutionality is questioned. The judiciary interprets and applies the law. "It does not formulate
public policy, which is the province of the legislative and executive branches of government."
Thus, it does not - by the mere existence of a law or regulation - embark on an exercise that may
render laws or regulations inefficacious. Lest the exercise of its power amount to a ruling on the
wisdom of the policy imposed by Congress on the subject matter of the law, the judiciary does
not arrogate unto itself the rule-making prerogative by a swift determination that a rule ought not
exist. There must be an actual case, "a contrast of legal rights that can be interpreted and
enforced on the basis of existing law and jurisprudence."99 (Citations omitted)
An actual case or controversy exists when there is a conflict of legal rights, an assertion of
opposite legal claims, susceptible of judicial resolution as distinguished from a hypothetical or
abstract difference or dispute.100 The issues presented must be definite and concrete, touching
on the legal relations of parties having adverse interests.101 There must be a contrariety of legal
rights that can be interpreted and enforced on the basis of existing law and
jurisprudence.102 Corollary thereto, the case must not be moot or academic, or based on extra-
legal or other similar considerations not cognizable by a court of justice.103 All these are in line
with the well-settled rule that this Court does not issue advisory opinions,104 nor does it resolve
mere academic questions, abstract quandaries, hypothetical or feigned problems, or mental
exercises, no matter how challenging or interesting they may be.105 Instead, case law requires
that there is ample showing of prima facie grave abuse of discretion in the assailed governmental
act in the context of actual, not merely theoretical, facts.106
Closely linked to this requirement is that the question must be ripe for adjudication.107 A
question is ripe for adjudication when the act being challenged has had a direct adverse effect on
the individual challenging it. For a case to be considered ripe for adjudication, it is a prerequisite
that something has been accomplished or performed by either branch before a court may come
into the picture, and the petitioner must allege the existence of an immediate or threatened injury
to himself as a result of the challenged action. He must show that he has sustained or is
immediately in danger of sustaining some direct injury as a result of the act complained of.108
Petitioners argue that the present petitions involve an actual and justiciable controversy as the
ATA and its IRR are already being enforced amidst serious allegations of unconstitutionality.
They invoke the doctrine of expanded judicial review to convince this Court that an actual and
justiciable controversy exists.109
In contrast, respondents allege that at the time the petitions were filed, the IRR of the ATA was
not yet issued, nor has the government done any act in furtherance of the law. Moreover, the
OSG states that mere theories and possibilities of abuse do not constitute a conflict of legal
rights. They argue that petitioners failed to present a prima facie grave abuse of discretion and
that the burden is not satisfied by the mere assertion that the law is unconstitutional since all
laws are presumed to be valid. Lastly, they assert that the case is not yet ripe for adjudication
since the government has yet to do any act which constitutes an immediate threat to petitioners'
rights.
The Court agrees with petitioners that the requisite of an actual case or controversy has been
complied at least with respect to certain issues falling within the purview of the delimited facial
analysis framework as will be herein discussed. This is because the consolidated petitions, in
challenging the ATA, have sufficiently raised concerns regarding the freedom of speech,
expression, and its cognate rights. As such, the petitions present a permissible facial challenge
on the ATA in the context of the freedom of speech and its cognate rights - and it is only on these
bases that the Court will rule upon the constitutionality of the law. Further, with respect to certain
provisions of the ATA, petitioners have sufficiently shown that there is a credible and imminent
threat of injury, as they may be subjected to the potential destructive consequences of
designation as well as possible detention and prosecution. In fact, the Court is mindful that
several of the petitioners have already come under the operation of the ATA as they have been
designated as terrorists.
Locus Standi
The second requisite of personal and substantial interest concerns legal standing. Legal standing
or locus standi is the "right of appearance in a court of justice on a given question."110 The
concept of locus standi calls for more than just a generalized grievance. It requires a personal
and substantial interest in the case such that the party has sustained or will sustain direct injury
as a result of the governmental act being challenged.111 The test is whether a party alleges
such personal stake in the outcome of the controversy as to "assure that concrete adverseness
which sharpens the presentation of issues upon which the court depends for illumination of
difficult constitutional questions."112 Thus, as a general rule, a party is not permitted to raise a
matter in which he has no personal interest.
Where the party challenges the constitutionality of a law, he or she must not only show that the
law is invalid, but that he has sustained or is in immediate or imminent danger of sustaining some
direct injury as a result of its enforcement, and not merely that he suffers in some indefinite way.
He or she must show that he or she has been, or is about to be, denied some right or privilege to
which he is lawfully entitled, or that he or she is about to be subjected to some burdens or
penalties by reason of the statute complained of.113 This rule is what governs when the
constitutionality of a statute is questioned by a party who must, at the very least, show a credible
threat of prosecution under the penal statute assailed.
Here, petitioners are suing before this Court as concerned Filipino citizens, members of the
Philippine Bar, members of Congress, taxpayers, and victims of terrorist-tagging by State forces,
who are under a credible threat of prosecution under the ATA. They also allege that their
standing is satisfied due to the transcendental importance of the matters involved in this case
and the serious threat the law poses on their sacred constitutional rights.114 They maintain that
injury to the individual is not the sole basis for the grant or recognition of standing before the
Court as injury to a public right is also a sufficient basis.115 Lastly, they argue that they are
mounting a facial challenge on the grounds of void-for-vagueness and overbreadth, which allow
third-party standing.
On the other hand, respondents allege that petitioners have no legal standing because they lack
direct, substantial, and personal interest in this case.116 The OSG points out that merely alleging
motherhood statements such as "transcendental importance" or the violation of their
constitutional rights are insufficient since petitioners fail to show any specific injury or suffering
which have been brought about by the law.117
Former Chief Justice Reynato S. Puno, who was appointed by the Court as amicus curiae in this
case, emphasized the necessity of exempting the present petitions from the strict application of
the rule on standing, explaining that:
The ruling case law is that petitioners who assail a law as void on the basis of its vagueness and
overbreadth are exempted from the strict rule on standing. A law that is vague and overly broad
is considered as an immense evil and destructive of fundamental rights in a democratic regime, it
ought to be struck down at the earliest opportunity by anyone in the body politic. It is a threat not
just to one but it is a threat to all and anyone can represent all in excising it out from our statute
book.118 (Emphasis supplied)
The Court adopts the view of Former Chief Justice Reynato S. Puno, which finds support in the
following pronouncement in Southern Hemisphere v. Anti-Terrorism Council119 (Southern
Hemisphere):
Distinguished from an as-applied challenge which considers only extant facts affecting real
litigants, a facial invalidation is an examination of the entire law, pinpointing its flaws and defects,
not only on the basis of its actual operation to the parties, but also on the assumption or
prediction that its very existence may cause others not before the court to refrain from
constitutionally protected speech or activities.120 (Emphasis and underscoring supplied)
As had already been pointed out earlier in this discussion, petitioner Casambre in G.R. No.
252767 is among the 19 individuals designated as terrorists under ATC Resolution No. 17 due to
his purported ties to the CPP/NPA. In addition, petitioner RMP in G.R. No. 252767 reported that
its bank accounts had been frozen upon orders from the AMLC for allegedly being used to
finance terrorism.125
It also did not escape the Court's attention that on May 12, 2021, respondent NSA Esperon
labelled CPP Founding Chairperson Jose Maria Sison as the "number 1 red-tagger" and played
an unverified and unauthenticated video where Jose Maria Sison purportedly enumerated
organizations supporting armed rebellion. Thereafter, respondent NSA Esperon alleged that the
International League of Peoples' Struggle, a formation of international solidarity with links to the
CPP, met in Hongkong in 2020. He added that the meeting was attended by "Anakbayan,
[Kilusang Mayo Uno], Bagong Alyansang Makabayan, GABRIELA, and several others,"126 and
the Court notes that these organizations are among those challenging the ATA.
Considering the application of the contested provisions of the ATA and the threat of the
imposition of consequences associated with being a terrorist, several petitioners including inter
alia petitioners Carpio, Carpio-Morales, Casambre, RPM, Anakbayan, Kilusang Mayo Uno,
Bagong Alyansang Makabayan, and GABRIELA have personal interests in the outcome of the
consolidated petitions. The Court finds that petitioners have sufficiently alleged the presence of
credible threat of injury for being constant targets of "red-tagging" or "truth-tagging." Therefore,
they satisfy the requisites of the traditional concept of legal standing.
The above notwithstanding, the Court finds that even if Casambre, RPM, Anakbayan, Kilusang
Mayo Uno, Bagong Alyansang Makabayan, and GABRIELA had not come under the actual
operation of the ATA, there would still have been no legal standing impediments to grant due
course to the petitions because they present actual facts that also partake of a facial challenge in
the context of free speech and its cognate rights. It is clear that unlike Southern Hemisphere, the
ATA presents a freedom of expression issue, and on this point, the pronouncement in Disini v.
Secretary of Justice127 (Disini) is now the prevailing authority:
In an "as applied" challenge, the petitioner who claims a violation of his constitutional right can
raise any constitutional ground - absence of due process, lack of fair notice, lack of ascertainable
standards, overbreadth, or vagueness. Here, one can challenge the constitutionality of a statute
only if he asserts a violation of his own rights. It prohibits one from assailing the constitutionality
of the statute based solely on the violation of the rights of third persons not before the court. This
rule is also known as the prohibition against third-party standing.
A petitioner may for instance mount a "facial" challenge to the constitutionality of a statute even if
he claims no violation of his own rights under the assailed statute where it involves free speech
on grounds of overbreadth or vagueness of the statute. The rationale for this exception is to
counter the "chilling effect" on protected speech that conies from statutes violating free speech. A
person who does not know whether his speech constitutes a crime under an overbroad or vague
law may simply restrain himself from speaking in order to avoid being charged of a crime. The
overbroad or vague law thus chills him into silence.128 (Emphases supplied)
Besides, petitioners may be treated as non-traditional suitors who may bring suit in
representation of parties not before the Court. In Funa v. Villar,129 the rule on non-traditional
suitors as recognized in David v. Macapagal-Arroyo130 was summarized. The legal standing of
the following individuals is recognized when specific requirements have been met:
(1) For taxpayers, there must be a claim of illegal disbursement of public funds or that the
tax measure is unconstitutional;
(2) For voters, there must be a showing of obvious interest in the validity of the election
law in question;
(3) For concerned citizens, there must be a showing that the issues raised are of
transcendental importance which must be settled at the earliest time; and
(4) For legislators, there must be a claim that the official action complained of infringes
their prerogatives as legislators.131
From the foregoing characterizations of the rule on locus standi, it is settled that legal standing is
a procedural technicality which this Court may choose to waive or relax in cases involving
transcendental importance to allow individuals or groups to sue even though they may not have
been personally injured by the operation of the law.132 Indeed, procedural barriers should not be
allowed to impede this Court's prerogative in resolving serious legal questions which greatly
affect public interest.133
Regardless of the type of non-traditional suitor that they allege to be - legislators, concerned
citizens, or taxpayers - all petitioners cry foul over the law's grave and imminent threat to their
constitutional rights. They are asking this Court to recognize that the ATA infringes on their rights
to due process, free speech, expression, association, and academic freedom, to name a few.
These petitions involve matters of transcendental importance and constitutional questions which
must be addressed by this Court immediately.
Earliest Opportunity
As to the third requisite of "earliest opportunity," this Court held in Arceta v. Mangrobang134 that
it does not mean immediately elevating the matter to this Court. Earliest opportunity means that
the question of unconstitutionality of the act in question should have been immediately raised in
the proceedings in the court below. Since the present constitutional challenge against the statute
was directly filed with this Court, the third requisite of judicial review of "earliest opportunity" is
complied with because the issue of constitutionality is raised at the first instance.
Lis Mota
The fourth requisite of lis mota means that this Court will not pass upon a question of
unconstitutionality, although properly presented, if the case can be disposed of on some other
ground.135 Thus, petitioners must be able to show that the case cannot be legally resolved
unless the constitutional question raised is determined.136 The lis mota requirement is based on
the rule that every law has in its favor the presumption of constitutionality,137 and to justify its
nullification, there must be a clear and unequivocal breach of the Constitution and not one that is
doubtful, speculative, or argumentative.138
The Court finds that the lis mota requirement is complied with by the very nature of the
constitutional challenge raised by petitioners against the ATA which deal squarely with the
freedom of speech, expression, and its cognate rights. Evidently, freedom of expression and its
cognate rights are legally demandable and enforceable, and any violation or perceived violation
by the law that chills or restricts the exercise of such rights inescapably involve questions
regarding its constitutionality.
Nevertheless, the Court should dismiss the following petitions: Balay Rehabilitation Center, Inc.
v. Duterte, docketed as G.R. No. 253118, and Yerbo v. Offices of the Honorable Senate
President and the Honorable Speaker of the House of Representatives (Yerbo), docketed as
UDK No. 16663.
The Balay Rehabilitation Center, Inc. petition must be dismissed on the ground of lack of merit,
as the arguments raised in questioning the validity of the ATA are hinged on existing laws and
not the Constitution. While petitioners did claim that they are at extreme risk of being designated
as terrorists and suspected of violating Sections 4 to 13 of the ATA and that many provisions of
the ATA violate the fundamental right to due process and equal protection under the Constitution,
the context of these arguments are based on their claim that the ATA violates and diminishes the
protections under R.A. No. 9344 or the Juvenile Justice and Welfare Act; R.A. No. 9745, or the
Anti-Torture Act of 2009; and R.A. No. 10353, or the Anti-Enforced or Involuntary Disappearance
Act of 2012, which protections they claim are guaranteed by the Constitution. Further, a careful
reading of this petition shows no allegation or claim of a supposed violation of the freedom of
speech, expression, or their cognate rights.
Meanwhile, the Yerbo petition should be dismissed for being fundamentally flawed both in form
and substance. The Yerbo petition has utterly failed to comply with the requirements of form,
whether under Rule 56 or Rule 65 of the Rules, and has not raised any substantial argument that
would merit this Court's attention. While the petitioner claims that the ATA uses an overbroad
definition of terrorism, he does not discuss his specific reasons why he believes it to be so and
does not provide arguments in support thereof, stating merely that this claim was "[a]ccording to
Human Rights Watch."139 He also included a statement that "[t]he new counterterrorism law
could have a horrific impact on basic civil liberties, due process, and the rule of law," but
attributes the same to a person named "Phil Robertson"140 with no proper reference therefor
and similarly, no particular reasons why be thinks this is so. The petitioner would go on to cite
statements and declarations of the Human Rights Watch and Phil Robertson two more times,
seemingly drawing around these sources as the basis of his petition. The foregoing is indicative
of what the petitioner will eventually submit as his "arguments" against the ATA, because after an
exceptionally terse discussion on why Section 29 runs afoul of Section 2, Article III of the
Constitution, the petitioner merely averred that:
As to his other grounds for seeking the nullity of certain provisions and/or sections of RA No.
11479, herein petitioner adopts the legal arguments and diseussions of his co-petitioners for lack
of time since he Avas told by LBC and JRS Express that it takes at least two (2) weeks for his
documents/mail matter to reach Metro Manila.141 (Emphasis supplied)
To the Court's mind, this explanation, and more so the failure to state any substantial argument
by merely adopting those in the other petitions, is simply unacceptable and shows utter
disrespect to the Court. Considering that this Court is a court of last resort, it should not waste its
time and resources in entertaining petitions containing averments such as the one quoted above.