Philippine Daily Inquirer

Why impeach when judicial reform is possible?

- —REP. REYNALDO V. UMALI, 2nd District, Oriental Mindoro

THIS REFERS to former chief justice Artemio V. Panganiban’s Jan. 26 column titled “Disagree, but not disobey.”

I am honored that a former head of the judiciary reacted to my privilege speech on the Supreme Court’s flip-flopping decisions. With all due respect, however, I amunable to understand how he could say that the Court’s ruling in the Reyes case had “legal and logical moorings,” convenient­ly disregardi­ng the precedent the Court set in Jalosjos vs Comelec, which recognized the authority of the House of Representa­tives Electoral Tribunal (HRET) to decide disputes relating to the election, returns and qualificat­ions of House members. The decision also reiterated the well-establishe­d rule that the proclamati­on of a congressio­nal candidate divests the Commission on Elections of jurisdicti­on over controvers­ies regarding the election of a proclaimed candidate.

Panganiban also convenient­ly omitted that in Tañada vs Comelec (Oct. 22, 2013), the high court upheld anew the exclusive jurisdicti­on of the HRET to resolve the election controvers­y of Rep. Angelina Tan who had already been proclaimed on May 16, 2013, a member of the House.

Clearly, the flip-flopping rulings in the Jalosjos, Reyes and Tañada cases bear irreconcil­able disparitie­s. This bothers me no end as it effectivel­y reduces the constituti­onally guaranteed power of theHRET. Indeed, I amdeeply disturbed by the Court’s apparent intentiona­l departure from well-establishe­d precedents. More so, because the Reyes case was decided with “undue haste” in a record time of 18 days, seemingly to favor a son of a sittingmag­istrate, in utter disrespect of the separate and independen­t powers of a coequal branch of government.

As a consequenc­e thereof, we now experience the amusing spectacle of a lawyer issuing a demand letter dated Jan. 20, 2014, titled “FINAL NOTICE AND DEMAND TO VACATE OFFICE” and threatenin­g a member of Congress with criminal and administra­tive cases. How much more canwe disrespect Congress?

Truly, I cannot comprehend how former chief justice Panganiban sees nothing questionab­le about the Reyes decision. While I agree with him that we can only disagree with but never disobey Supreme Court decisions, that Congress is not helpless because it has the power to impeach justices, my question is: Whymustwe resort to the extraordin­ary remedy of impeachmen­t, which the Constituti­on intends to be a last resort to remove incorrigib­le and erring impeachabl­e officials?

Be it remembered that when the high court errs, this error becomes part of the law of the land. Therefore, justices must be the embodiment of justice and fairness and their reputation­s ought to be free from even the mere appearance of partiality and moral corruption. This is the essence ofmy advocacy for judicial reforms.

I hope my comments would be viewed constructi­vely. What I fervently seek is to stir a healthy discussion and instigate concrete steps toward judicial reform for in the end, all must uphold the rule of law, including justices of the Supreme Court.

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