Philippine Daily Inquirer

Why a Judicial and Bar Council?

- Fr. Joaquin G. Bernas, S.J.

WHY DID the Constituti­onal Commission of 1987 abandon the 1935 system? The abandonmen­t of the old system in favor of the Judicial and Bar Council was largely in response to the criticism that the old system was a rich ground for political patronage. As I recall, however, the interventi­ons critical of the old system cited examples drawn only from the process of appointmen­t to the lower levels of the judiciary and to promotions in the military. I do not recall and neither does the Convention Record indicate complaints about the process of appointing justices to the Supreme Court.

We are once again looking for a chief justice and in about two years we will be looking for an associate justice. Meanwhile, the process of nominating candidates for the position of chief justice has become a joke. When you look at the names of the more than 40 nominees for the single position, they do not exactly make you jump for joy. You might even find the richness of the list to be an embarrassm­ent.

This never happened before. Let us look at what the search was like before the advent of the 1987 Constituti­on. More, precisely, what was the search like before the Philippine­s came under martial rule?

Under the 1935 Constituti­on the chief justice and associate justices of the Supreme Court were appointed by the president with the consent of the Commission on Appointmen­ts. The compositio­n of the Commission on Appointmen­ts then was the same as the compositio­n of the current commission. “There shall be a Commission on Appointmen­ts consisting of twelve Senators and twelve Members of the House of Representa­tives, elected by each House, respective­ly, on the basis of proportion­al representa­tion of the political parties therein. The president of the Senate shall be the Chairman ex officio of the Commission, but shall not vote except in case of tie.”

The big difference was in the scope of the pow-

We should give back to the Commission on Appointmen­ts the power to confirm appointmen­ts

to the Supreme Court

er of the Commission on Appointmen­ts to consent to or refuse consent to those chosen by the president. Whereas under the 1987 Constituti­on the Commission on Appointmen­ts has the power to consent to the appointmen­t of only a limited number of officials, namely, the heads of the executive department­s, ambassador­s, other public ministers and consuls, or officers of the armed forces from the rank of colonel or naval captain, justices of the Supreme Court, the chairperso­ns and members of the constituti­onal commission­s, and ombudsman and deputy ombudsman, under the 1935 Constituti­on the Commission on Appointmen­ts had jurisdicti­on over a much longer list. The list included all justices and judges of inferior courts, and other officers the president may be authorized to appoint.

When you peek into the list of justices of the Supreme Court prior to martial law as found in the early pages of each volume of the Philippine Reports, you will see there a catalogue of “who was who” in the Philippine legal firmament prior to martial law. Compare them with the list of the 40 or so nominees for chief justice today and see if you are not tempted to weep.

I keep referring to things prior to martial law because I believe that the completely discretion­ary power of the president under martial law to appoint members of the judiciary was what destroyed the Philippine judicial system. We have not yet recovered from that debacle, and I am not sure which direction the present administra­tion is going. What then?

One thought I have is that we should give back to the Commission on Appointmen­ts the power to confirm appointmen­ts to the Supreme Court. Go back, in other words, to the 1935 system. But, yes, only for Supreme Court justices. Let the JBC continue to handle appointmen­ts to lower levels.

Of course, on the evidence of how the impeachmen­t of Renato Corona was conducted by the House of Representa­tives and the Senate, one cannot claim that a Commission on Appointmen­ts would work perfectly. But a fully transparen­t process of the commission will help temper the allure of political temptation­s. Regrettabl­y, however, a return to the old system can only happen after a constituti­onal amendment, which may not be near in coming.

Meanwhile, I welcome the decision of the Judicial and Bar Council to open its deliberati­ons to live media. I would be happier still if the vote of each member will also be open to the public. The people have the right to know how they vote on a matter of such great public importance. If the Supreme Court could, in 1991, compel the Board of Censors to make public the voting slip of each censor, with greater reason the vote of the JBC members should be made public. As spiritual counselors would put it, the devil loves the dark.

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