GARCILLANO VS. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
GR
170338 December 23, 2008
Not
effective Publication of Laws
FACTS:
In 2005, tapes which allegedly
contained a conversation between GMA and COMELEC Commissioner Garcillano
surfaced. The said conversation contained a plan to rig the elections to favor
GMA. The recordings then became subject to legislative hearings conducted
separately by each House. In his privilege speech, Sen. Escudero motioned a
congressional investigation jointly conducted by the Committees on Public
Information, Public Order and Safety, National Defense and Security,
Information and Communications Technology, and Suffrage and Electoral Reforms
(respondent House Committees). During the inquiry, several versions of the
wiretapped conversation emerged. Lacson’s motion for a senate inquiry was referred
to the Committee on National Defense and Security headed by Biazon. Garci
subsequently filed to petitions. One to prevent the playing of the tapes in the
each house for they are alleged to be inadmissible and the other to prohibit
and stop the conduct of the Senate inquiry on the wiretapped conversation.
ISSUE:
Whether or
not publication is indispensable.
HELD:
Yes.
Garci’s petition to strike the tapes
off the record cannot be granted. The tapes were already played in Congress and
those tapes were already highly publicized. The issue is already overtaken by
these incidents hence it has become moot and academic. The second petition must
be granted however. The Senate cannot be allowed to continue with the conduct
of the questioned legislative inquiry without duly published rules of
procedure, in clear derogation of the constitutional requirement.
Section 21,
Article VI of the 1987 Constitution explicitly provides that “[t]he Senate or
the House of Representatives, or any of its respective committees may conduct
inquiries in aid of legislation in accordance with its duly
published rules of procedure.” The requisite of publication of the
rules is intended to satisfy the basic requirements of due process. Publication
is indeed imperative, for it will be the height of injustice to punish or
otherwise burden a citizen for the transgression of a law or rule of which he
had no notice whatsoever, not even a constructive one. What constitutes
publication is set forth in Article 2 of the Civil Code, which provides that “laws
shall take effect after 15 days following the completion of their publication
either in the Official Gazette, or in a newspaper of general circulation in the
Philippines.”
The Senate
admits in their pleadings and even on oral argument that the Senate Rules of
Procedure Governing Inquiries in Aid of Legislation had been published in
newspapers of general circulation only in 1995 and in 2006. With respect to the
present Senate of the 14th Congress,
however, of which the term of half of its members commenced on June 30, 2007,
no effort was undertaken for the publication of these rules when they first
opened their session.
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