Sun.Star Cebu

DO IMPEACHMEN­T RIGHT: IBP

Integrated Bar of the Philippine­s says it will ask the SC to drop quo warranto case against CJ Sereno

- SUNSTAR PHILIPPINE­S

The Integrated Bar of the Philippine­s (IBP) said Thursday, March 22, that it will ask the Supreme Court to dismiss the quo warranto petition filed against Chief Justice Ma. Lourdes Sereno.

In a statement, the IBP said that under the Constituti­on, “impeachmen­t is the only mode of removal of an impeachabl­e officer for an impeachabl­e offense,” not through a quo warranto petition, which was filed by the

Office of the Solicitor General. Quo warranto is a legal procedure used to resolve a dispute over whether a person has the legal right to or authority over the public office that he or she occupies.

“A person who usurps, intrudes into, or unlawfully holds or exercises a public office, position or franchise, or a public officer who does or suffers an act which, by the provision of law, constitute­s a ground for the forfeiture of his office” may be slapped with such petition, according to Rule 66 of the Rules of Court.

In Solicitor General Jose Calida’s quo warranto petition, he said Sereno “unlawfully” holds her post due to her “failure” to fully disclose her wealth.

But the IBP said “entertaini­ng the quo warranto petition on account of the Chief Justice’s supposed lack of integrity is tantamount to subjecting her to the disciplina­ry authority of the Supreme Court.”

“Under the Constituti­on, the members of the Supreme Court may not be ordered dismissed by any government authority other than by the Senate after an impeachmen­t proceeding,” it added.

“The Supreme Court may not inquire into the Chief Justice’s alleged lack of integrity without violating the fundamenta­l principle of separation of powers. Having been appointed to her current post, the Chief Justice is presumed to have been previously adjudged by the President as having met the requiremen­t of integrity. Consistent with the separation of powers, such judgment cannot be reviewed, much less reversed, by the Supreme Court. The President remains the ultimate judge of a candidate’s worthiness,” said the IBP.

Sereno was appointed to the Supreme Court by former President Benigno Aquino III in 2012 following the ouster of the late Chief Justice Renato Corona.

The IBP added that since Sereno may only be removed via impeachmen­t on a question of integrity, “the quo warranto proceeding­s against her may not prosper because what cannot be done directly cannot be done indirectly.” /

 ?? AP FOTO ?? MEETING: Foreign Affairs Sec. Alan Peter Cayetano with Chinese Foreign Minister and State Counselor Wang Yi in a press conference in Beijing yesterday.
AP FOTO MEETING: Foreign Affairs Sec. Alan Peter Cayetano with Chinese Foreign Minister and State Counselor Wang Yi in a press conference in Beijing yesterday.

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