EN BANC
[ G.R. No. 124137, March 25, 1997 ]ROY M. LOYOLA v. COMELEC +
ROY M. LOYOLA, PETITIONER, VS. THE COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS, ROLANDO ROSAS AND THE REGIONAL TRIAL COURT, BRANCH 89, IMUS, CAVITE, RESPONDENT.
D E C I S I O N
ROY M. LOYOLA v. COMELEC +
ROY M. LOYOLA, PETITIONER, VS. THE COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS, ROLANDO ROSAS AND THE REGIONAL TRIAL COURT, BRANCH 89, IMUS, CAVITE, RESPONDENT.
D E C I S I O N
DAVIDE, JR., J.:
Is full payment of the required filing fee of P300 a jurisdictional requirement in election protests? Stated otherwise, does incomplete payment of filing fee suffice, provided the parties concerned pay the deficiency within the period fixed by the
court?
These are the questions that confront us in this special civil action for certiorari to set aside the 21 March 1996 Resolution[1] of the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) in SPR No. 4-96 entitled Roy M. Loyola vs. Rolando Rosas and Hon. Eduardo Israel Tanguangco.
The factual and procedural antecedents are related in the challenged Resolution as follows:
On their part, the public respondents, through the Office of the Solicitor General, point out that petitioner himself paid only P32 as filing fee for his counter-protest, and unconditionally paid the deficiency of P268 after he was also ordered by the RTC to do so, thus, the filing of his petition for certiorari with the COMELEC only on 23 January 1996, or three months after the issuance of the order, was a mere afterthought. They likewise contend that petitioner's reliance on Gatchalian is misplaced because in that case "there was absolutely no payment at all of the filing fee;" and that his conclusion that Gatchalian superseded Pahilan is incorrect since the latter involved an "incomplete payment of the filing fee" and was even cited by the former.
After due deliberation, we find nothing to convince us that public respondent COMELEC committed any abuse of discretion, much less grave, in its challenged resolution. Affirmance of its ruling that public respondent RTC committed no grave abuse of discretion in denying petitioner's Motion to Dismiss Protest is inevitable.
Petitioner never disputed the allegations of private respondent that it was the Clerk of Court of the RTC who assessed the amount of P32 as filing fee at the time of the filing of the election protest; that the same amount was assessed for petitioner's counter-protest; and that both complied with the order directing each of them to pay the deficiency of P268. Petitioner's good faith in filing with the COMELEC a petition for certiorari to challenge the denial of his Motion to Dismiss Protest is obviously suspect. That he resorted to such remedy confirmed a scheme to unduly delay the election protest. This circumstance, however, is not decisive in resolving the merits of the case. We must, nevertheless, reiterate the maxim that he who comes to court must come with clean hands.
The key issue is whether the RTC acquired jurisdiction over private respondent's election protest despite the payment, upon the filing thereof, of only a part of the filing fee fixed in Section 9 of Rule 35 of the COMELEC Rules of Procedure which fixes the filing fee at P300. Yet, the Clerk of Court assessed and collected only the sum of P32. Evidently, the Clerk of Court had in mind the former Section 5(a)(11),[4] Rule 141 of the Rules of Court on filing fees. The error of the Clerk of Court could be due to ignorance of Section 9 of Rule 35 of the COMELEC Rules of Procedure and this Court's 4 September 1990 resolution amending Rule 141 of the Rules of Court on legal fees. Or it could be due to sheer confusion as to which rule would apply in assessing the filing fee considering that the election protest falls within the exclusive original jurisdiction of the Regional Trial Court,[5] in which case the Rules of Court may govern, and that the COMELEC Rules of Procedure was primarily intended to govern election cases before the COMELEC.[6] This ignorance or confusion, however, was not fatal to private respondent's cause. The application by the Clerk of Court of Section 5 of Rule 141 of the Rules of Court substantially vested the RTC with jurisdiction over the election protest. Although this Court had given its imprimatur to said Section 9 of Rule 35 of the COMELEC Rules of Procedure,[7] the failure of the Clerk of Court to take said section into account is a technicality which cannot be allowed to defeat the viability of the election protest.
Indisputably, there was only incomplete payment of the filing fee under Section 9 of Rule 35 of the COMELEC Rules of Procedure, which was not at all attributable to private respondent, who forthwith paid the deficiency upon a subsequent order by the RTC. In short, there was substantial compliance with the filing fee requirement in election cases, for as we held in Pahilan v. Tabalba:
This decision, however, must not provide relief to parties in future cases involving inadequate payment of filing fees in election protests. Pahilan, Gatchalian and this case would no longer provide any excuse for such shortcoming. Elsewise stated, these cases now bar any claim of good faith, excusable negligence or mistake in any failure to pay the full amount of filing fees in election cases which may be filed after the promulgation of this decision.
IN VIEW OF ALL THE FOREGOING, the instant petition is DISMISSED for want of merit. The temporary restraining order issued on 25 January 1996 is LIFTED and the Regional Trial Court, Branch 89, Bacoor, Cavite, is DIRECTED to resolve Election Protest Case No. 95-1 (Rolando C. Rosas v. Roy Loyola) with all reasonable dispatch.
Costs against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
Narvasa, C.J., Padilla, Regalado, Romero, Bellosillo, Melo, Puno, Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza, Francisco, Hermosisima, Jr., Panganiban, and Torres, Jr., JJ., concur.
[1] Annex "A" of Petition, Rollo, 20-25.
[2] 230 SCRA 205 [1994].
[3] 245 SCRA 208 [1995].
[4] Now Section 7(b)(3), which increased the filing fee for actions not involving property from P32 to P400; per Resolution of this Court dated 4 September 1990.
[5] Section 2(2), Article IX-C of the Constitution.
[6] Section 3, Article IX-C provides as follows:
SEC. 3. The Commission on Elections may sit en banc or in two divisions, and shall promulgate its rules of procedure in order to expedite disposition of election cases, including pre-proclamation controversies. All such election cases shall be heard and decided in division, provided that motions for reconsideration of decisions shall be decided by the Commission en banc.
[7] See Gatchalian v. Court of Appeals, supra note 3. It may also be pointed out that under Section 5(5) of Article VIII (Judicial Department) of the Constitution, "(r)ules of procedure of special courts and quasi-judicial bodies shall remain effective unless disapproved by the Supreme Court.
[8] 20 SCRA 808, 818-819 (1967). See also Benito v. COMELEC, 235 SCRA 436 (1994); Bince v. COMELEC, 242 SCRA 273 (1995).
[9] Citing Gardiner v. Romulo, 26 Phil. 521; Galang v. Miranda, 35 Phil. 269; Jalandoni v. Sarcom, G.R. No. L-6496, January 27, 1962; Macasunding v. Macalañgan, G.R. No. L-22779, March 31, 1965; Cauton v. Commission on Elections, G.R. No. L-25467, April 27, 1967.
[10] Citing Ibasco v. Ilao, G.R. No. L-17512, December 29, 1960.
These are the questions that confront us in this special civil action for certiorari to set aside the 21 March 1996 Resolution[1] of the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) in SPR No. 4-96 entitled Roy M. Loyola vs. Rolando Rosas and Hon. Eduardo Israel Tanguangco.
The factual and procedural antecedents are related in the challenged Resolution as follows:
Gleaned from the records, it appears that on May 9, 1995, petitioner Roy M. Loyola was proclaimed by the Municipal Board of Canvassers as the duly elected Mayor of the municipality of Carmona, Cavite.The COMELEC held that the trial court acquired jurisdiction over the protest pursuant to this Court's ruling in Pahilan v. Tabalba,[2] where there was merely incomplete payment of the filing fee. It disagreed with petitioner's view that the applicable doctrine was that laid down in Gatchalian v. Court of Appeals,[3] and ratiocinated as follows:
On May 19, 1995, an election protest was filed by herein private respondent Rolando Rosas before the Regional Trial Court, Branch 89 of Bacoor, Cavite, presided by Judge Eduardo Israel Tanguangco. The protest was docketed as EPC No. 95-1.
On 4 January 1996, petitioner Loyola (then protestee) filed a Motion to Dismiss Protest on the ground that protestant (now private respondent) failed to pay the filing fee of P300.00 at the time of the filing of the protest. He contended that the failure of protestant to pay the correct amount of filing fee did not vest jurisdiction on the court to take cognizance over the protest. At this juncture, he cited the case of Gatchalian vs. Court of Appeals, et al., G.R. No. 107979, June 19, 1995, to the effect that it is the payment of the filing fee that vests jurisdiction upon the court over the election protest.
In his opposition, private respondent posited the argument that the factual circumstances obtaining in the case of Gatchalian do not fall squarely with the present case as the latter involves non-payment of filing fee while the present case contemplates a situation where there was only an incomplete payment of filing fee.
In its order of January 17, 1996, the trial court resolved two (2) motions, namely: (1) protestee's "Motion to Dismiss Protest," and (2) protestant's "Motion for Additional Revision Day and/or Time and to Issue Appropriate Guidelines to Expedite the Revision Process." Accordingly, the court denied the Motion to Dismiss the protest for lack of merit holding that there was only an incomplete payment of the correct filing fee and that protestant, pursuant to the court's order, paid the correct amount on October 16, 1995. With respect to the private respondent's motion, the court said: "x x x, the parties are hereby adjured to direct their respective revisors to exert more efforts to finish the revision proceedings as soon as possible."
By virtue of the trial court's order, petitioner resorted to the instant Petition for Certiorari alleging grave abuse of discretion on the part of herein public respondent Judge in denying his "Motion to Dismiss Protest."
On January 25, 1996, the Commission En Banc issued a Temporary Restraining Order against the respondent Judge directing him to cease and desist from further conducting revision of ballots and hearing Election Case No. 95-1 entitled Rosas vs. Loyola until further orders from the Commission.
On February 5, 1996, private respondent filed his answer alleging, among others, that the case is not a case of non-payment of filing fee but a clear case of incomplete payment of filing fee and not a ground for dismissing the election protest. He advanced the argument that both petitioner and private respondent have complied with the order of the respondent Judge to pay the balance of the correct amount of filing fee for petitioner's counter-protest and for private respondent's election protest.
It cannot be gainsaid that private respondent Rolando Rosas paid the amount of P268.00 on October 16, 1995 representing the balance of the correct amount of filing fee. Consequently, there is no reason why the protest, filed within the ten-day period provided by the law, should not be given due course by the trial court. Besides, private respondent should not be faulted in not paying the correct amount of P300.00 as filing fee as he convincingly made it clear that it was the Clerk of Court of the Regional Trial Court who asked him to pay the amount of P32.00 as filing fee for the protest. Moreover, it is highly preposterous to conclude that private respondent, who has paid other fees other than the questioned filing fee the amount of which is even higher than the correct filing fee, could deliberately and intentionally pay only an amount of P32.00 as filing fee.Aggrieved thereby, petitioner filed the instant special action for certiorari under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court contending that respondent COMELEC "gravely abused its discretion amounting to lack of jurisdiction in not sustaining [his] contention and submission that said electoral protest deserves outright dismissal on the ground of lack of jurisdiction of the Regional Trial Court to hear and decide the same." At bottom, he insists that the rule laid down in Pahilan v. Tabalba has been abandoned in Gatchalian v. Court of Appeals. Pursuant to Gatchalian, it is the payment of the filing fee that vests jurisdiction on the court over election protest cases in view of Section 9, Rule 35 of the COMELEC Rules of Procedure, which provides as follows:
SEC. 9. Filing fee. -- No protest, counter-protest, or protest-in-intervention shall be given due course without the payment of the filing fee in the amount of three hundred pesos (P300.00) for each interest.On the other hand, private respondent claims that it was the Clerk of Court of the RTC who assessed a filing fee of P32, instead of P300, and that petitioner himself likewise paid P32 as filing fee for his counter-protest. Both complied with the order of the RTC requiring them to pay P268 each for the "balance of the correct amount of filing fee." Private respondent further asserts that Gatchalian is not applicable, as it involved "non-payment of filing fee," while here, there was only "incomplete payment" of the correct filing fee; hence Pahilan applies.
On their part, the public respondents, through the Office of the Solicitor General, point out that petitioner himself paid only P32 as filing fee for his counter-protest, and unconditionally paid the deficiency of P268 after he was also ordered by the RTC to do so, thus, the filing of his petition for certiorari with the COMELEC only on 23 January 1996, or three months after the issuance of the order, was a mere afterthought. They likewise contend that petitioner's reliance on Gatchalian is misplaced because in that case "there was absolutely no payment at all of the filing fee;" and that his conclusion that Gatchalian superseded Pahilan is incorrect since the latter involved an "incomplete payment of the filing fee" and was even cited by the former.
After due deliberation, we find nothing to convince us that public respondent COMELEC committed any abuse of discretion, much less grave, in its challenged resolution. Affirmance of its ruling that public respondent RTC committed no grave abuse of discretion in denying petitioner's Motion to Dismiss Protest is inevitable.
Petitioner never disputed the allegations of private respondent that it was the Clerk of Court of the RTC who assessed the amount of P32 as filing fee at the time of the filing of the election protest; that the same amount was assessed for petitioner's counter-protest; and that both complied with the order directing each of them to pay the deficiency of P268. Petitioner's good faith in filing with the COMELEC a petition for certiorari to challenge the denial of his Motion to Dismiss Protest is obviously suspect. That he resorted to such remedy confirmed a scheme to unduly delay the election protest. This circumstance, however, is not decisive in resolving the merits of the case. We must, nevertheless, reiterate the maxim that he who comes to court must come with clean hands.
The key issue is whether the RTC acquired jurisdiction over private respondent's election protest despite the payment, upon the filing thereof, of only a part of the filing fee fixed in Section 9 of Rule 35 of the COMELEC Rules of Procedure which fixes the filing fee at P300. Yet, the Clerk of Court assessed and collected only the sum of P32. Evidently, the Clerk of Court had in mind the former Section 5(a)(11),[4] Rule 141 of the Rules of Court on filing fees. The error of the Clerk of Court could be due to ignorance of Section 9 of Rule 35 of the COMELEC Rules of Procedure and this Court's 4 September 1990 resolution amending Rule 141 of the Rules of Court on legal fees. Or it could be due to sheer confusion as to which rule would apply in assessing the filing fee considering that the election protest falls within the exclusive original jurisdiction of the Regional Trial Court,[5] in which case the Rules of Court may govern, and that the COMELEC Rules of Procedure was primarily intended to govern election cases before the COMELEC.[6] This ignorance or confusion, however, was not fatal to private respondent's cause. The application by the Clerk of Court of Section 5 of Rule 141 of the Rules of Court substantially vested the RTC with jurisdiction over the election protest. Although this Court had given its imprimatur to said Section 9 of Rule 35 of the COMELEC Rules of Procedure,[7] the failure of the Clerk of Court to take said section into account is a technicality which cannot be allowed to defeat the viability of the election protest.
Indisputably, there was only incomplete payment of the filing fee under Section 9 of Rule 35 of the COMELEC Rules of Procedure, which was not at all attributable to private respondent, who forthwith paid the deficiency upon a subsequent order by the RTC. In short, there was substantial compliance with the filing fee requirement in election cases, for as we held in Pahilan v. Tabalba:
The rules which apply to ordinary civil actions may not necessarily serve the purpose of election cases, especially if we consider the fact that election laws are to be accorded utmost liberality in their interpretation and application, bearing in mind always that the will of the people must be upheld. Ordinary civil actions would generally involve private interests while all election cases are, at all times, invested with public interest which cannot be defeated by mere procedural or technical infirmities.In the earlier case of Juliano v. Court of Appeals,[8] we ruled:
Well settled is the doctrine that election contests involve public interest, and technicalities and procedural barriers should not be allowed to stand if they constitute an obstacle to the determination of the true will of the electorate in the choice of their elective officials. And also settled is the rule that laws governing election contests must be liberally construed to the end that the will of the people in the choice of public officials may not be defeated by mere technical objections.[9] In an election case the court has an imperative duty to ascertain by all means within its command who is the real candidate elected by the electorate.[10]We have no doubt that petitioner has misread or miscomprehended Gatchalian v. Court of Appeals. As emphasized by the public and private respondents, that case involved absence of payment of the filing fee. Any suggestion then that Gatchalian abandoned Pahilan is absolutely baseless. Both can stand together.
This decision, however, must not provide relief to parties in future cases involving inadequate payment of filing fees in election protests. Pahilan, Gatchalian and this case would no longer provide any excuse for such shortcoming. Elsewise stated, these cases now bar any claim of good faith, excusable negligence or mistake in any failure to pay the full amount of filing fees in election cases which may be filed after the promulgation of this decision.
IN VIEW OF ALL THE FOREGOING, the instant petition is DISMISSED for want of merit. The temporary restraining order issued on 25 January 1996 is LIFTED and the Regional Trial Court, Branch 89, Bacoor, Cavite, is DIRECTED to resolve Election Protest Case No. 95-1 (Rolando C. Rosas v. Roy Loyola) with all reasonable dispatch.
Costs against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
Narvasa, C.J., Padilla, Regalado, Romero, Bellosillo, Melo, Puno, Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza, Francisco, Hermosisima, Jr., Panganiban, and Torres, Jr., JJ., concur.
[1] Annex "A" of Petition, Rollo, 20-25.
[2] 230 SCRA 205 [1994].
[3] 245 SCRA 208 [1995].
[4] Now Section 7(b)(3), which increased the filing fee for actions not involving property from P32 to P400; per Resolution of this Court dated 4 September 1990.
[5] Section 2(2), Article IX-C of the Constitution.
[6] Section 3, Article IX-C provides as follows:
SEC. 3. The Commission on Elections may sit en banc or in two divisions, and shall promulgate its rules of procedure in order to expedite disposition of election cases, including pre-proclamation controversies. All such election cases shall be heard and decided in division, provided that motions for reconsideration of decisions shall be decided by the Commission en banc.
[7] See Gatchalian v. Court of Appeals, supra note 3. It may also be pointed out that under Section 5(5) of Article VIII (Judicial Department) of the Constitution, "(r)ules of procedure of special courts and quasi-judicial bodies shall remain effective unless disapproved by the Supreme Court.
[8] 20 SCRA 808, 818-819 (1967). See also Benito v. COMELEC, 235 SCRA 436 (1994); Bince v. COMELEC, 242 SCRA 273 (1995).
[9] Citing Gardiner v. Romulo, 26 Phil. 521; Galang v. Miranda, 35 Phil. 269; Jalandoni v. Sarcom, G.R. No. L-6496, January 27, 1962; Macasunding v. Macalañgan, G.R. No. L-22779, March 31, 1965; Cauton v. Commission on Elections, G.R. No. L-25467, April 27, 1967.
[10] Citing Ibasco v. Ilao, G.R. No. L-17512, December 29, 1960.