The Manila Times

Bullies in the House

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have to prove that the justices accepted material or monetary favors in order for bribery and graft and corruption to attach. Issuing an unfavorabl­e decision is not a high crime. There were also no foreign enemy interests served or a government overthrow attempted when Sereno was ousted for the justices to be found guilty of treason.

The only possible ground for Lagman and his gang to anchor their case is to accuse the eight justices who voted to unseat Sereno as having committed a culpable violation of the Constituti­on and therefore having betrayed public trust. But even on this, their case doesn’t stand on solid ground. This is because they are taking the irrational and illogical stance of accusing the eight justices of violating the Constituti­on on the basis of how the latter interprete­d it in the Sereno case. This is a ridiculous position to take, considerin­g that the Supreme Court’s job is precisely to interpret the Constituti­on, and while one can disagree with its interpreta­tion, one cannot use that to accuse the court or any of its member as having violated the Constituti­on. This is unlike the case when Sereno failed to submit her statement of assets, liabilitie­s and net worth (SALN), or when former Chief Justice Renato Corona misdeclare­d his SALN. These acts rose to the level of culpable violations of the Constituti­on because they are transgress­ions of In fact, if one goes back to the intent of the framers of the 1987 Con-

for an act to become a culpable violation of the Constituti­on, it has to be done with deliberate intent and a certain degree of perversity. Commission­er Regalado Maambong, a member of the Constituti­onal Commission that framed the 1987 Charter, quoted a document pertaining to the impeachmen­t of President Elpidio Quirino, which stated that “culpable violation of the Constituti­on means willful and intentiona­l violation of the Constituti­on and not violation committed unintentio­nally or involuntar­ily or in good faith or thru an honest mistake of judgment.”

Thus, Lagman and his gang will have to prove that the majority of the court in the Sereno case willfully and with deliberate intent misinterpr­eted the Constituti­on. However, the facts of the matter strongly contravene this. The Constituti­on gives the court original jurisdicti­on over quo warranto petitions. The court did not infringe into the constituti­onal duty of the House of Representa­tives to initiate impeachmen­t proceeding­s and of the Senate to hear and decide the case, considerin­g that what the court addressed was a different proceeding with a different complainan­t, issues, cause of action and penalty. Whatever debate

are removable only through impeachmen­t is not for Congress to decide, but for the court to determine, which is exactly what it did and for which its members could not be impeached for culpably violating the Constituti­on.

In fact, granting without admitting that the justices were wrong, such could not be considered as an impeachabl­e offense when it emanates from an honest mistake of judgment. Unfortunat­ely for Lagman and his gang, while every citizen can take part in interpreti­ng the Constituti­on and the laws, it is only the Supreme Court that is

The adage that when the court is wrong, it is still right still resonates with clarity. And while the court is not infallible, it is still supreme on all constituti­onal matters.

Indeed, while Congress, as representa­tives of the people, is entrusted with the power to impeach, such is limited to the enumeratio­n of impeachabl­e offenses provided in the Constituti­on. Certainly, the justices could not be impeached simply because Congress disagrees with their decisions.

In the absence of clear evidence that one or several of the justices were bribed, or that their decision was arbitrary and not based on jurisprude­nce, and that it violated their own rules, then the threat of Lagman’s gang amounts to a partisan assault on the independen­ce of the judiciary. In doing so, they behave like defeated bullies throwing a tantrum and miserably contradict­ing themselves.

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