The Manila Times

Is it right to remove Chief Justice Sereno?

- BY RICARDO SALUDO Columnist SaludoA5

SHE’s a goner. With the political and Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno looks set not to return to the Supreme

The House of Representa­tives, which has the power to impeach the Senate for trial, has amassed voluminous testimonie­s and documents alleging several impeachabl­e offenses, including culpable violation of the Constituti­on for usurping the SC’s collegial power.

From the statements of House Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez and justice committee chairman Reynaldo Umali, the impeachmen­t Gadon is sure to get far more than the 30 percent of House votes needed to impeach.

Then yesterday, Solicitor General Jose Calida, acting on complaints filed in his OSG office, petitioned the Supreme Court, now presided by Senior Associate Justice Antonio Carpio, to declare Sereno’s CJ appointmen­t in 2012 -

Are there grounds in law and evidence to invalidate Sereno’s 2012 appointmen­t? If so, would it be right for the Supreme Court to do so, on both moral and governance grounds? If not, then it would be up to the Senate whether she returns as Chief Justice, or leaves in disgrace.

To void or not to void

The OSG petition alleges that to be nominated for the position of Chief Justice, because she failed to satisfy a couple of the requiremen­ts set by the Judicial and Bar Council ( JBC), empowered to make recommenda­tions for judicial positions.

First, Sereno failed to submit her annual statement of assets, liabilitie­s and net worth ( SALN) for several of the 10 years prior to 2012, as required by the JBC. A council staffer disclosed this omission during a House impeachmen­t hearing two weeks ago.

Moreover, both the University of the Philippine­s human employee records, and the Of also keeps SALNs, said they did not have any record of receiving Sereno’s asset statements for the missing years: 2003- 2005 and 2007-2008, when she was a professor at the UP College of Law.

Second, based on tests and interviews, JBC psychologi­sts gave Sereno a grade of 4, just one notch above the psychotic rating of 5. Now, it was JBC policy not to recommend for a court position anyone rating below 3, yet Sereno was included in the short list of nominees for Chief Justice, replacing ousted CJ Renato Corona.

in requiremen­ts set by the JBC to ensure the integrity and psycho OSG argued that Sereno failed to qualify for the CJ appointmen­t. Hence, by quo warranto proceeding­s, her appointmen­t should be voided, and she should vacate the position to which she was not validly appointed.

Besides weighing these legal grounds and evidence, the Supreme Court will need to decide if the quo warranto petition was filed within the one- year period set by the Rules of Court. Section 11 of Rule 66 on quo warranto states:

“Nothing contained in this Rule shall be construed to authorize an action against a public commenced within one (1) year after the cause of such ouster, or the right of the petitioner to hold such office or position, arose, nor to authorize an action for damages in accordance with the provisions of the next preceding section unless the same be commenced within one (1) year after the entry of the judgment establishi­ng the petitioner’s right

Solicitor General Calida argues that the one-year limit that applies As cited in his petition, the causes Sereno failed to submit several of the SALNs required by the JBC, and that she did not get a psychologi­cal rating of 3 or better – both of which came to light only during the impeachmen­t hearings of the past few months. Hence, the quo warranto petition would be within the one-year period, the OSG contends.

Impeach, not invalidate

Opposition stalwarts Sen. Antonio Trillanes 4th and Rep. Edsel Lagman, along with the Makabayan bloc of leftist party- list congressme­n, have attacked the quo warranto suit as impinging on the power of Congress to remove impeachabl­e officials. They also claimed that the OSG petition showed the weakness of the impeachmen­t complaint and evidence.

We’ll leave the strength of the impeachmen­t case for another time. As to the issue of quo warranto vs impeachmen­t, Solicitor General Calida argues that both can proceed without impinging on each other.

Impeachmen­t by Congress ap their positions by election or appointmen­t according to law. It covers alleged offenses after validly

Quo warranto, on the other not validly appointed to a position process of nomination and appointmen­t, or some other defect.

Thus, an official removed by quo warranto ruling is deemed not to have been properly appointed, and therefore does not hold the impeachabl­e position at all. There would be no need to impeach him, since he does not even hold the post under the law.

The OSG case cites the cases against then-Commission on Elections Chairman Vicente de Vera and then-Commission on Audit Chairman Antonio Villar. The high court ruled that quo warranto was the right proceeding to question de Vera’s appointmen­t, not impeachmen­t. And the SC ousted Villar by declaring his promotion from commission­er to chairman invalid, since it violated the Constituti­on’s provision barring reappointm­ent of a COA commission­er.

But is it right to oust her?

From the above discussion, it seems the Supreme Court can void the appointmen­ts of impeachabl­e officials, even as Congress can remove them by impeachmen­t. Now, should her fellow magistrate­s remove CJ Sereno?

Legally speaking, the justices can rule as they wish on the quo warranto petition, and that is legal basis enough, whatever other quarters may argue. But would it be morally right?

her appointmen­t was invalid, and given their apparent disdain, as seen in the testimony or evidence given by most of them against her in Congress, and in the request of 13 justices for doesn’t seem good for accountabi­lity and sound leadership in the judiciary to restore CJ Sereno. She should go.

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