Philippine Daily Inquirer

Half-baked SC decision on Poe

- Raul J. Palabrica

THE DECISION of the Supreme Court on the qualificat­ion of Sen. Grace Poe to run for president in the May elections was a big letdown to people who wanted a clear resolution of that issue.

The majority decision, which was agreed to by nine justices, set aside the earlier order of the Commission on Elections invalidati­ng Poe’s certificat­e of candidacy for misreprese­ntation of facts about her citizenshi­p and residency, and declared her qualified to aspire for the highest position of the land.

But Associate Justice Antonio Carpio pointed out in his dissenting opinion that Poe’s status as a natural-born citizen was not confirmed by a majority of the justices, or eight out of 15 justices.

He said of the nine justices, seven voted to consider her a natural-born citizen and two did not state their position on her citizenshi­p and residency qualificat­ions.

In addition, two justices concurred with setting aside the Comelec’s rejection of Poe’s certificat­e of candidacy, but refrained from passing upon the issue of her status as a natural-born citizen.

Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno, however, stated that since only 12 justices participat­ed in the deliberati­ons on the citizenshi­p issue, the seven justices who voted in favor of Poe constitute­d the majority vote on that issue.

From a layman’s point of view, the justices who did not think the issue over Poe’s citizenshi­p is ripe for adjudicati­on and withheld their vote may be considered to have abstained from voting. Under ordinary circumstan­ces, an abstention is not included in the counting of the number of “aye” or “nay” votes unless the organizati­on’s internal rules state otherwise.

So, whose interpreta­tion on what constitute­s a majority in the resolution of the citizenshi­p issue is correct? The Chief Justice’s or that of the longest serving associate justice?

Noticeably, despite the fact that this issue was known to the justices before the promulgati­on of the majority decision, no other justices in the majority weighed in on it or did any act to settle it and avoid confusion about the true state of Poe’s citizenshi­p.

Thus, rather than put the citizenshi­p controvers­y to rest, the decision muddled it and provided plausible justificat­ion for the filing of a motion for reconsider­ation by the losing parties.

This kind of “majority vote” issue did not arise during the watch of then Chief Justices Hilario Davide Jr. and Reynato Puno. The tribunal’s decisions then on important social and political issues were cut and dried. The justices’ positions were clearly defined and spelled out. The litigants knew exactly whether or not they got the nod of the majority of the justices.

According to a court insider, when an important case is under considerat­ion by the entire court, the chief justice sets the agenda in the definition of the issues to be passed upon and the manner they should be resolved.

Onthe strength of the chief justice’s moral leadership and esteem among his or her colleagues, the “Chief” can steer the flow of the discussion of the issues and the shape of the majority decision without telling the justices how to vote.

The idea is, whatever decision is promulgate­d can be clearly understood by the public, not just the lawyers, and can serve as the standard against which similar or related issues that may arise in the future can be measured.

The motions for reconsider­ation filed by the losing parties will give the tribunal an opportunit­y to resolve clearly and unequivoca­lly the issue on Poe’s citizenshi­p status.

Since the filing of these motions opens the case for fresh deliberati­ons by the tribunal, the justices whose silence on the citizenshi­p issue raised questions on how such action should be interprete­d can act appropriat­ely, whichever way it goes, to resolve the “majority vote” question.

If the decision is affirmed in all respects, and the “majority vote” issue is left hanging, Poe’s citizenshi­p status will, in the public’s perception, be in continuing legal limbo.

The motions for reconsider­ation have to accomplish two things: First, raise new arguments to convince the high court to uphold the Comelec order in question, and second, impress on the justices who think Poe’s citizenshi­p is not relevant to the resolution of the case the importance of their opinion on that issue.

With the reopening of the case for discussion, it would be prudent for the justices to closely study the principle or rationale that underlies the constituti­onal requiremen­t that only natural-born citizens, or Filipinos whose citizenshi­p stems from clear biological ties to Filipino parents, should be given the privilege to hold the highest position of the land.

The requiremen­t on natural-born citizenshi­p is not an empty requiremen­t. It is based on strong nationalis­tic principles that cannot be decided on the basis of statistics or by reference to physical features.

Anybody who claims natural-born Filipino citizenshi­p, and therefore entitled to all the rights and privileges that accrue to that status, has the burden of proof in that assertion. Raul J. Palabrica (rpalabrica@inquirer.com.ph) writes a weekly column in the Business section of the INQUIRER.

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