Facts:
Tapes
ostensibly containing a wiretapped conversation purportedly between the
President of the Philippines and a high-ranking official of the Commission on
Elections (COMELEC) surfaced. The tapes, notoriously referred to as the
"Hello Garci" tapes, allegedly contained the President’s instructions
to COMELEC Commissioner Virgilio Garcillano to manipulate in her favor results
of the 2004 presidential elections. These recordings were to become the subject
of heated legislative hearings conducted separately by committees of both
Houses of Congress.
Intervenor
Sagge alleges violation of his right to due process considering that he is
summoned to attend the Senate hearings without being apprised not only of his
rights therein through the publication of the Senate Rules of Procedure
Governing Inquiries in Aid of Legislation, but also of the intended legislation
which underpins the investigation. He further intervenes as a taxpayer
bewailing the useless and wasteful expenditure of public funds involved in the
conduct of the questioned hearings.
The
respondents in G.R. No. 179275 admit 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.
Respondents
justify their non-observance of the constitutionally mandated publication by
arguing that the rules have never been amended since 1995 and, despite that,
they are published in booklet form available to anyone for free, and accessible
to the public at the Senate’s internet web page.
Issue:
Whether
or not publication of the Rules of Procedures Governing Inquiries in Aid of Legislation
through the Senate’s website, satisfies the due process requirement of law.
Held:
The
publication of the Rules of Procedure in the website of the Senate, or
in pamphlet form available at the Senate, is not sufficient under the Tañada
v. Tuvera ruling which requires publication either in the Official Gazette
or in a newspaper of general circulation. The Rules of Procedure even
provide that the rules "shall take effect seven (7) days after publication
in two (2) newspapers of general circulation," precluding any other form
of publication. Publication in accordance with Tañada is mandatory to
comply with the due process requirement because the Rules of Procedure
put a person’s liberty at risk. A person who violates the Rules of Procedure
could be arrested and detained by the Senate.
The
invocation by the respondents of the provisions of R.A. No. 8792, otherwise known as the Electronic Commerce Act of 2000, to support their claim
of valid publication through the internet is all the more incorrect. R.A. 8792
considers an electronic data message or an electronic document as the
functional equivalent of a written document only for evidentiary purposes.
In other words, the law merely recognizes the admissibility in evidence (for
their being the original) of electronic data messages and/or electronic documents.
It does not make the internet a medium for publishing laws, rules and
regulations.
Given
this discussion, the respondent Senate Committees, therefore, could not, in
violation of the Constitution, use its unpublished rules in the legislative
inquiry subject of these consolidated cases. The conduct of inquiries in aid of
legislation by the Senate has to be deferred until it shall have caused the
publication of the rules, because it can do so only "in accordance with
its duly published rules of procedure."
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