EN BANC
IN THE MATTER OF THE BREWING A.M. No. 09-5-2-SC
CONTROVERSIES IN THE ELECTION
IN THE INTEGRATED BAR OF THE
PHILIPPINES,
x--------------------------------------------------x
ATTYS. MARCIAL M. MAGSINO, A.C. No. 8292
MANUEL M. MARAMBA and
NASSER MAROHOMSALIC,
Complainants,
Present:
CORONA,
C.J.,
CARPIO,
CARPIO
MORALES,
VELASCO,
JR.,*
NACHURA,
LEONARDO-DE
CASTRO,
- v e r s u s
- BRION,**
PERALTA,
BERSAMIN,
DEL
CASTILLO,
ABAD,
VILLARAMA,
JR.,
PEREZ,
MENDOZA
and
SERENO,
JJ.
ATTYS. ROGELIO A. VINLUAN,
ABELARDO C. ESTRADA, BONIFACIO
T. BARANDON, JR., EVERGISTO S.
ESCALON and RAYMUND JORGE A.
MERCADO,
Respondents.
Promulgated:
December
14, 2010
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R E S O L U T I O N
CORONA, C.J.:
This resolves the above matter
involving the leadership controversy at the Integrated Bar of the Philippines
(IBP) and the administrative case that was filed against some of the
high-ranking officers of the IBP on account thereof.
I. Antecedents
The Court in an En Banc Resolution dated June 2, 2009 created a Special
(Investigating) Committee[1] to
look into the “brewing controversies in the IBP elections, specifically in the elections
of Vice-President for the Greater Manila Region and Executive Vice-President of
the IBP itself xxx and any other election controversy involving other chapters
of the IBP, if any”, that includes as well the election of the Governors for
Western Mindanao and Western Visayas.
Consequently, the Special Committee
called the IBP officers involved to a preliminary conference on June 10, 2009.
With respect thereto, Atty. Rogelio A. Vinluan then submitted a Preliminary
Conference Brief on the same day. During the conference it was determined that
the investigation would focus on the following issues or controversies:
1. What is the correct interpretation of Section 31,
Article V of the IBP By-Laws which provides:
“SEC. 31. Membership.
– The membership (of Delegates) shall consist of all the Chapter Presidents
and, in the case of Chapters entitled to more than one Delegate each, the
Vice-Presidents of the Chapters and such additional Delegates as the Chapters
are entitled to. Unless the Vice-President is already a Delegate, he shall be
an alternate Delegate. Additional Delegates and alternates shall in proper
cases be elected by the Board of Officers of the Chapter. Members of the Board
of Governors who are not Delegates shall be members ex officio of the House, without the right to vote.”
2. Who
was validly elected Governor for the Greater Manila Region?
3. Who
was validly elected Governor for Western Visayas Region?
4. Who
was validly elected Governor for Western Mindanao Region?
5. Who was
validly elected IBP Executive Vice President for the next term?
6. What
is the liability, if any, of respondent Atty. Rogelio A. Vinluan under the
administrative complaint for “grave professional misconduct, violation of
attorney’s oath, and acts inimical to the IBP” filed against him by Attys.
Marcial Magsino, Manuel Maramba and Nasser Marohomsalic?
Meanwhile,
a Supplemental Complaint dated June 11, 2009 was received from Attys. Magsino,
Maramba and Marohomsalic regarding the earlier complaint that they filed last
May 21, 2009 against Atty. Vinluan.
As such, then IBP President Feliciano
M. Bautista and then Executive Vice President (EVP) Vinluan agreed to submit
their respective position papers on the above issues and controversies. Also,
Atty. Vinluan was required to file his answer to the administrative complaint
against him.
A
Position Paper dated June 15, 2009 was then received from Atty. Vinluan. Attys.
Elpidio G. Soriano, III and Erwin M. Fortunato also filed their Position Papers
both dated June 15, 2009. It appears that an earlier Position Paper also dated
June 15, 2009 was submitted by Atty. Benjamin B. Lanto.
For their part, Attys. Bautista,
Maramba and Magsino filed their Position Paper dated June 16, 2009.
Incidentally, in a Manifestation likewise dated June 16, 2009 Attys. Bautista,
Maramba and Marcial M. Magsino submitted the same paper but already bearing the
signature of Atty. Bautista.
Atty.
Nasser A. Marohomsalic submitted his Position Paper dated June 17, 2009. The Special Committee, in the course
of its investigation, further received a letter dated June 22, 2009 from Atty.
Alex L. Macalawi, President of the IBP Lanao del Sur Chapter.
As
to the administrative case filed against him, Atty. Vinluan, as respondent,
filed his Comment dated June 15, 2009. In turn, Attys. Magsino, Maramba and
Marohomsalic, as complainants, submitted their Reply dated June 23, 2009.
The
Special Committee then submitted a Report and Recommendation dated July 9, 2009
the dispositive portion of which read as follows:
A. That to avoid further controversy
regarding its proper interpretation and implementation, Sec. 31, Article V, of
the By-Laws should be amended as follows (suggested amendments are in bold
print):
“SEC. 31. Membership. – The membership of the House of Delegates shall
consist of all the Chapter Presidents and in the case of Chapters entitled to
mo(r)e than on(e) Delegate each, the Vice President of the Chapters and such
additional Delegates as the Chapters are entitled to. Unless the Vice President
is already (a) delegate, he shall be an alternate Delegate. Additional Delegates and their respective
alternates shall be elected from, and by, the Board of Officers of the Chapter.
If the Delegate chosen is incapacitated, or disqualified, or resigns, or
refuses to serve, and there are enough members of the Board to be elected as
Delegates, then the Board of Officers shall elect the additional delegates and
alternates from the general membership of the Chapter, and his corresponding
alternate shall take his place.”
B. That to avoid any ambiguity as to
how the President shall preside and vote in meetings of the House of Delegates,
paragraph (g), Sec. 33, Article V of the By-Laws should be amended as follows:
“(g) In all meetings and deliberations
of the House, whether in annual or special convention, the President shall
preside, or the Executive Vice
President, if the President is absent or incapacitated, but neither of them
shall vote except to break a tie.”
C. Similarly, Sec. 42, Article VI of
the By-Laws, on meetings of the Board of Governors, should be amended to read
as follows:
“Sec. 42. Meetings. –
The Board shall meet regularly once a month, on such date and such time and
place as it shall designate. Special meetings may be called by the President,
and shall be called by him upon the written request of five (5) members of the
Board. The President shall not vote
except to break a tie in the voting. When for any reason, the President cannot
preside on account of his absence, incapacity, or refusal to call a meeting,
the Executive Vice President shall preside, there being a quorum to transact
business, but he may not vote except to break a tie.
D. That Sec. 43, Article VI of the
By-Laws, on the procedure for approving a resolution by the Board of Governors
without a meeting, should be amended by adding the following exception thereto
so that the procedure may not be abused in connection with any election in the
IBP:
“This
provision shall not apply when the Board shall hold an election or hear and
decide an election protest.”
E.
That the provision for the strict implementation of the rotation rule among the
Chapters in the Regions for the election of the Governor for the regions, (as
ordered by this Honorable Court in Bar Matter No. 586, May 14, 1991) should be
incorporated in Sec. 39, Article VI of the By-Laws, as follows:
“Sec.
39. Nomination
and election of the Governors. – At least one (1) month before the
national convention the delegates from each region shall elect the Governor for
their region, who shall be chosen by
rotation which is mandatory and shall be strictly implemented among the
Chapters in the region. When a Chapter waives its turn in the rotation order,
its place shall redound to the next Chapter in the line. Nevertheless, the
former may reclaim its right to the Governorship at any time before the
rotation is completed; otherwise, it will have to wait for its turn in the next
round, in the same place that it had in the round completed.
F.
That in view of the fact that the IBP no longer elects its President, because
the Executive Vice President automatically succeeds the President at the end of
his term, Sec. 47, Article VII of the By-Laws should be amended by deleting the
provision for the election of the President. Moreover, for the strict
implementation of the rotation rule, the Committee recommends that there should
be a sanction for its violation, thus:
“Sec.
47. National Officers. – The
Integrated Bar of the Philippines shall have a President, an Executive Vice
President, and nine (9) regional
Governors. The Executive Vice President shall be elected on a strict rotation
basis by the Board of Governors from among themselves, by the vote of at least
five (5) Governors. The Governors shall be ex officio Vice President for their respective regions. There shall
also be a Secretary and Treasurer of the Board of Governors.
“The violation of the rotation rule in any
election shall be penalized by annulment of the election and disqualification of
the offender from election or appointment to any office in the IBP.”
G.
That Atty. Manuel M. Maramba should be declared the duly elected Governor of
the Greater Manila Region for the 2009-2011 term.
H.
That Atty. Erwin Fortunato of the Romblon Chapter should be declared the duly
elected Governor of the Western Visayas Region for the 2009-2011 term.
I. That a special election should be held in
the Western Mindanao Region, within fifteen (15) days from notice, to elect the
Governor of that region for the 2009-2011 term. In accordance with the rotation
rule, only the six (6) Chapters in the region that have not yet been elected to
the Board of Governors, namely: Zamboanga Sibugay, Zamboanga del Norte,
Za(m)boanga del Sur, Lanao del Norte, Misamis Occidental, and
Maguindanao-Cotabato City, shall participate in the election.
J.
That, thereafter, a special election should also be held by the Board of
Governors to elect the Executive Vice President for the 2009-2011 term with
strict observance of the rotation rule. Inasmuch as for the past nine (9)
terms, i.e., since the 1991-1993 term, the nominees of the Western Visayas and
Eastern Mindanao Regions have not yet been elected Executive Vice President of
the IBP, the special election shall choose only between the nominees of these
two (2) regions who shall become the Executive Vice President for the 2009-2011
term, in accordance with the strict rotation rule.
K.
That the high-handed and divisive tactics of Atty. Rogelio A. Vinluan and his
group of Governors, Abelardo Estrada, Bonifacio Barandon, Jr., Evergisto
Escalon, and Raymund Mercado, which disrupted the peaceful and orderly flow of
business in the IBP, caused chaos in the National Office, bitter disagreements,
and ill-feelings, and almost disintegrated the Integrated Bar, constituted
grave professional misconduct which should be appropriately sanctioned to
discourage its repetition in the future.
II. Findings of
the Special Committee
In
its Report and Recommendation dated July 9, 2009, the Special Committee
disclosed when it was discussing the Board of Officers of each chapter that:
The government of a Chapter is vested
in its Board of Officers composed of nine (9) officers, namely: the
President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer, and five (5) Directors who
shall be elected by the members of the Chapter at the biennial meeting on the
last Saturday of February, and shall hold office for a term of two (2) years
from the first day of April following their election and until their successors
shall have been duly chosen and qualified. For the 2009-2011 term, the election
of Chapter officers was held on February 28, 2009.
In
1983 up to 1995, the Quezon City Chapter elected the usual nine (9) officers to
its Board of Officers and they were all delegates to the House of Delegates.
Beginning with the 1997-1999 term, when it added a Public Relations Officer
(P.R.O.) and Auditor to its Board of Officers, the number of delegates allotted
to the Chapter was also increased to eleven (11) like the membership in its
Board of Officers, pursuant to a reapportionment of delegates by the Board of
Governors under Sec. 30, Art. V of the By-Laws.
Up
to the 2007-2009 term, all the officers of the QC Chapter were also the Chapter’s
delegates to the House of Delegates. Atty. Victoria Loanzon who has been an
officer of the Chapter in various capacities since 2003, like her fellow
officers in the Board, automatically became a delegate since 2003 up to this
time.
For
the 2009-2011 term, the Board of Officers of the IBP-QC Chapter that assumed
office on April 1, 2009, is composed of six (6) officers and (5) directors,
namely:
President
- - - - - - - - - - Tranquil Salvador III
Vice
President - - - - - - Jonas Cabochan
Secretary
- - - - - - - - - - Christian Fernandez
Treasurer
- - - - - - - - - - Victoria Loanzon
Auditor
- - - - - - - - - - - Ginger Anne Castillo
P.R.O.
- - - - - - - - - - - - Ernesto Tabujara III
Director
- - - - - - - - - - - Annalou Nachura
Director
- - - - - - - - - - - Melody Sampaga
Director
- - - - - - - - - - - Francois Rivera
Director
- - - - - - - - - - - Joseph Cerezo
Director
- - - - - - - - - - - Marita Iris Laqui
It
is important to be an officer of one’s Chapter and a delegate to the House of
Delegates, because a delegate gets to elect the Governor for the Region (which
must rotate among the Chapters in the region). The Governor of the Region
becomes a member of the Board of Governors, and gets to elect, or be elected,
as the next IBP Executive Vice President who automatically becomes President
for the next succeeding term (which must also rotate among the Regions).[2]
The
Special Committee then pointed out that with respect to the IBP Board of
Governors this consists of “nine (9) Governors from the nine (9) Regions. One
(1) Governor for each Region shall be elected by the members of the House of
Delegates from that region only. The Governors, the President and the Executive
Vice-President shall hold office for a term of two (2) years from July 1
immediately following their election, up to June 30 of their second year in
office and until their successors shall have been duly chosen and qualified.”
It was further added by the Committee that:
At least one (1) month before the national
convention, the delegates from each Region shall elect the Governor for their
region. The IBP By-Laws provide that “starting in 1993-1995, the principle on rotation shall be strictly implemented so
that all prior elections for Governor in the region shall be reckoned with or
considered in determining who should be Governor to be selected from the
different chapters to represent the region in the Board of Governors. Hence,
the governorship of the region shall rotate
among the chapters in the region.
The
Governors-elect shall, by a vote of at least five (5), choose an Executive
Vice-President, x x x either from among
themselves or from other members of the Integrated Bar. The Executive Vice-President shall automatically become President for
the next succeeding term. The Presidency shall rotate among the nine (9)
Regions.[3]
According
to the Committee, the “rotation of the position of Governor of a region among
the Chapters was ordered by the Supreme Court in its Resolution dated May 14, 1991
in Bar Matter No. 586 (Clarification Re: Bar Matter No. 491, Atty. Romulo T.
Capulong petitioner)”. With respect thereto, it was revealed that:
Pursuant
to the principle of rotation, the governorship of a region shall rotate once in
as many terms as the number of chapters there are in the region, to give every
chapter a chance to represent the region in the Board of Governors. Thus, in a
region composed of 5 chapters, each chapter is entitled to the governorship
once in every 5 terms, or once every ten (10) years, since a term is two (2)
years.
The
record of the National IBP Secretariat shows that during the past five (5)
terms, from 1999 up to 2009, the GMR (Greater Manila Region) governorship was
occupied by the five (5) chapters of the region as follows:
1999-2001 ----- Jose P. Icaonapo
------------ Manila III
2001-2003 ----- Santos V. Catubay, Jr. ----
QuezonCity
2003-2005 ----- Rosario Setias-Reyes ------
Manila II
2005-2007 ----- Alicia A. Risos-Vidal ------
Manila I
2007-2009 ----- Marcial M. Magsino -------
Manila IV
In
the next round, which starts with the 2009-2011 term, the same order of
rotation should be followed by the five (5) chapters, i.e., Manila III shall
begin the round, to be followed by Quezon City for 2011-2013 term, Manila for
the 2013-2015 term, Manila I for the 2015-2017 term, and Manila IV for the
2017-2019 term.
In
the Western Visayas Region which is composed of ten (10) chapters, each chapter
is entitled to represent the governorship of the region once every ten (10)
terms. The first chapter to occupy the governorship, must wait for the nine (9)
other chapters to serve their respective terms, before it may have its turn
again as Governor of the region.
The
same rule applies to the Western Mindanao Region which is composed of twelve
(12) chapters.
On
April 25, 2009, the election of Governors for the nine (9) IBP regions
proceeded as scheduled, presided over by their respective outgoing Governor.[4]
It
was then cited by the Special Committee that “Sec. 47, Art. VII of the By-Laws,
as amended by Bar Matter 491, Oct. 6, 1989, provides that the Executive Vice
President shall be chosen by the Board of Governors from among the nine (9)
regional governors. The Executive Vice President shall automatically become
President for the next succeeding term. The Presidency shall rotate among the
nine Regions.” Further, the Committee averred that:
The list of national presidents
furnished the Special Committee by the IBP National Secretariat, shows that the
governors of the following regions were President of the IBP during the past
nine (9) terms (1991-2009):
Numeriano
Tanopo, Jr. (Pangasinan) --- Central Luzon --- 1991-1993
Mervin
G. Encanto (Quezon City) ------ Manila ------------ 1993-1995
Raul
R. Angangco (Makati) -------------- Southern Luzon - 1995-1997
Jose
Aguila Grapilon (Biliran) ----------- Eastern Visayas – 1997-1999
Arthur
D. Lim (Zambasulta) ------------- Western Mindanao-1999-2001
Teofilo
S. Pilando, Jr. (Kalinga-Apayao)-Northern Luzon – 2001-2003
Jose
Anselmo I. Cadiz (Camarines Sur) –Bicolandia -------- 2003-2005
Jose
Anselmo I. Cadiz (Camarines Sur) –Bicolandia ----2005-Aug 2006
Jose
Vicente B. Salazar (Albay) ---------- Bicolandia --- Aug. 2006-2007
Feliciano
M. Bautista (Pangasinan) ------ Central Luzon ---- 2007-2009
Only
the governors of the Western Visayas and Eastern Mindanao regions have not yet
had their turn as Executive Vice President cum
next IBP President, while Central Luzon and Bicolandia have had two (2)
terms already.
Therefore,
either the governor of the Western Visayas Region, or the governor of the
Eastern Mindanao Region should be elected as Executive Vice-President for the
2009-2011 term. The one who is not chosen for this term, shall have his turn in
the next (2011-2013) term. Afterwards, another rotation shall commence with
Greater Manila in the lead, followed by Southern Luzon, Eastern Visayas,
Western Mindanao, Northern Luzon, Bicolandia, Central Luzon, and either Western
Visayas or Eastern Mindanao at the end of the round.[5]
The
Committee then disclosed that the controversies involved herein and should be
resolved are the following: (I) the dispute concerning additional delegates of
the QC Chapter to the House of Delegates; (II) the election of the Governor for
the Greater Manila Region (GMR); (III) the election of Governor for the Western
Visayas Region; (IV) the election of Governor for the Western Mindanao Region;
(V) the resolution of the election protests; (VI) the election of the IBP
Executive Vice President for the 2009-2011 term; and, (VII) the administrative
complaint against EVP Rogelio Vinluan.
In
addressing the above controversies, the Committee arrived at the following
findings and conclusions:
I.
The silence of Sec. 31, Art. V of the IBP By-Laws on who may be elected as
additional delegates and alternates by the remaining members of the Board of
Officers of the Chapter when
the Chapter is entitled to more than two (2) delegates to the House of
Delegates, is the root cause of the conflicting resolutions of the Bautista and
Vinluan factions on the proper interpretation of the aforementioned provision
of the By-Laws.
According
to the Resolution No. XVIII-2009 dated April 17, 2009 of the Bautista Group,
“the additional delegate/s shall be elected by the Board of Officers of the
Chapter only from among the remaining
duly elected officers and members of the Board, in consideration of their
mandate from the general membership.
According
to the Resolution No. XVIII-2009 (Special-23 April 2009) of the Vinluan Group,
“the election of the additional delegate/s for the Chapters entitled to more
than two (2) delegates shall be elected by the Board of Officers of the Chapter
from among the general membership who are
in good standing to include the remaining duly elected officers and members of
the Board.”
The
Committee finds the qualification introduced by Resolution No. XVIII-2009 – “that the additional delegate/s and
alternates must be elected from among the remaining officers of the Chapter” –
to be consistent with the precedent set by Section 31 itself in appointing members of the Board of Officers, namely,
(a) the president of the Chapter as the delegate, and the vice president as the
alternate, or second, delegate to the House of Delegates, when the Chapter is
entitled to two (2) delegates. There is a manifest intention in Sec. 31, Art. V
of the By-Laws to reserve membership in the House of Delegates (which is the
deliberative body of the IBP) for the elected officers of the Chapter since
they have already received the mandate of the general membership of the
Chapter.
For
the past four (4) terms (2003-2011), Atty. Loanzon has been an officer and delegate
of the QC Chapter to the House of Delegates, until the Vinluan Group introduced
its own interpretation of the aforementioned provision of the By-Laws and
elected non-officers of the Chapter as delegates to the House of Delegates in
lieu of herself and Atty. Laqui.
We
find the Vinluan Group’s interpretation of Sec. 31, Art. V, of the By-Laws in
Resolution No. XVIII-2009 (Special – 23 April 2009) to be in error and devoid
of rational and historical bases.
II.
Attys. Victoria Loanzon and Marite Laqui
were properly recognized as delegates of the QC Chapter by the Presiding
Officer, GMR Governor Marcial Magsino, during the election on April 25, 2009 of
the Governor for the Greater Manila Region, in accordance with the guideline in
Resolution No. XVIII-2009.
The
argument of the QC-Chapter President Tranquil Salvador, that Attys. Loanzon and
Laqui were not delegates because they were not elected by the QC-Board of
Officers, is not well taken.
Sec.
31, Art. V of the By-Laws provides that:
“Additional
Delegates and alternates shall in proper
cases be elected by the Board of Officers of the Chapter.”
The
QC Chapter is not a “proper case” for the election of additional delegates by
the Board of Officers because the Chapter is entitled to the same number of
delegates (11) to the House, as the number of officers in its Board of
Officers. Its officers are ipso facto the
Chapter’s delegates to the House. There is no need for the Board of Officers to
conduct an election.
A
“proper case” for the election of additional delegates and alternates by the
Board of Officers occurs when the number of additional delegates and alternates
for the Chapter is less than the members of the Board of Officers, for, then,
the Board of Officers must select, and elect, who among themselves should be
the additional delegate/s and alternates of the Chapter to the House of
Delegates. That has never been the case of the QC Chapter.
III. Atty. Manuel
Maramba (Manila III Chapter) was validly elected as GMR Governor for the
2009-2011 term, not
only because he outvoted his rival, Atty. Elpidio Soriano (Quezon City
Chapter), but also because under the principle of rotation of the governorship
(Bar Matter No. 586, May 14, 1991) since the five (5) chapters of the Greater
Manila Region have all represented the region in the Board of Governors during
the past five (5) terms, in the following order:
1999-2001
-------- Manila III -------- Jose P. Icaonapo
2001-2003
-------- Quezon City ----- Santos V. Catubay, Jr.
2003-2005
-------- Manila II ---------- Rosario Setias-Reyes
2005-2007
-------- Manila I ----------- Alicia A. Risos-Vidal
2007-2009
-------- Manila IV --------- Marcial M. Magsino
it is now the turn of the
representative of the Manila III Chapter to sit again in the Board of Governors
for the next round which begins in the 2009-2011 term. The Manila III
representative, Atty. Manuel M. Maramba, has every right to the position not
only because he won the election with 13 votes in his favor against 12 for
Atty. Soriano, but also because his election follows the rotation rule decreed
by the Supreme Court.
On
the other hand, the election of Atty. Soriano (QC Chapter) in the special
election that was presided over by EVP Vinluan on May 4, 2009, was a nullity on
three (3) grounds: First, because Atty. Soriano already lost the election on
April 25, 2009. Second, the special election conducted by the Vinluan Group on
May 4, 2(00)8 was illegal because it was not called nor presided over by the
regional Governor. Third, Atty. Soriano is disqualified to run for GMR Governor
for the 2009-2011 term because his “election” as such would violate the
rotation rule which the Supreme Court requires to be “strictly implemented”.
Under the rotation rule, the GMR governorship for the 2009-2011 term belongs to
the Manila III Chapter, not to the QC Chapter, whose turn will come two (2)
years later, in 2011-2013 yet.
IV. Atty. Erwin
Fortunato of the Romblon Chapter was duly elected as Governor for the Western
Visayas Region for the 2009-2011 term, not only because he obtained the highest number of votes
among the three (3) candidates for the position, but also because under the
rotation rule, it is now the turn of the Romblon Chapter to represent the
Western Visayas Region in the IBP Board of Governors.
The
contention of the protestants, Attys. Cornelio Aldon (Antique Chapter) and
Benjamin Ortega (Negros Occidental Chapter) that the rotation rule in Sections
37 and 39 of the IBP By-Laws is not mandatory but only directory, betrays their
ignorance of the resolution of the Supreme Court in Bar Matter No. 586 dated
May 16, 1991, ruling that “the principle on rotation shall be strictly
implemented so that all prior elections for governor in the region shall be
reckoned with or considered in determining who should be the governor to be
selected from the different chapters to represent the region in the Board of
Governors.”
V. Neither Atty. Nasser
Marohomsalic nor Atty. Benjamin Lanto is qualified to be elected Governor of
Western Mindanao Region. Sec.
39, Art. VI of the IBP By-Laws provides that: “Starting in 1993-1995, the
principle of rotation in the position of governor among the different chapters
to represent the region in the Board of Governors shall be strictly
implemented.
Under
Sec. 37, Art. VI of the By-Laws, the Governor of a region shall be elected by
the members of the House of Delegates from that region only. Since the delegate
of a Chapter to the House of Delegates is the President of the Chapter, not the
Board of Officers, the nominee of the Chapter President, not the nominee of the
Board of Officers, is the valid nominee for Governor of the Region.
However,
under the rotation rule, it is not the
Lanao del Sur Chapter that should represent the Western Mindanao Region in the
Board of Governors for the 2009-2011 term. The record of the IBP National
Secretariat shows that, starting in 1993-1995 when the strict implementation of
the rotation rule began, the 12-chapter Western Mindanao Region has been
represented in the Board of Governors by only six (6) Chapters, as follows:
1993-1995
----- Lanao del Sur ------ Dimnatang T. Saro
1995-1997
----- Cotabato ------------ George C. Jabido
1997-1999
----- ZAMBASULTA -- Arthur D. Lim
1999-2001
----- ZAMBASULTA -- Paulino R. Ersando
2001-2003
----- North Cotabato --- Little Sarah A. Agdeppa
2003-2005
----- Sultan Kudarat ---- Carlos L. Valdez, Jr.
2005-2007
----- SOCSARGEN ----- Rogelio C. Garcia
2007-2009
----- Sultan Kudarat ---- Carlos L. Valdez, Jr.
Therefore,
pursuant to the strict rotation, the Lanao del Sur Chapter must wait for the
six (6) other Chapters in the region (Zamboanga Sibugay, Zamboanga del Norte,
Zamboanga del Sur, Lanao del Norte, Misamis Occidental, and
Maguindanao-Cotabato City) to have their turn in the Board of Governors before
Lanao del Sur may again represent the Western Mindanao Region in the Board of
Governors.
Since
both Attys. Nasser Marohomsalic and B(e)njamin Lanto belong to the Lanao del
Sur Chapter, both of them are disqualified to be elected as Governor of the
Western Mindanao Region for the 2009-2011 term. With respect to Atty. Benjamin
Lanto, his nomination by the Board of Officers was not only invalid, but also
lost credibility after three (3), out of the thirteen (13) signatories to his nomination,
resigned from the Board of Officers, and six (6) others signed “authorizations”
in favor of Atty. Macalawi authorizing him to nominate and elect the Governor
for the Western Mindanao Region. That left only four (4) votes in favor of his
nomination for Governor of the Western Mindanao Region.
VI. The elections for
the IBP Executive Vice President separately held on May 9, 2009 by the Bautista
and Vinluan Groups were null and void for lack of quorum. The presence of five (5)
Governors-elect is needed to constitute a quorum of the 9-member Board of
Governors-elect who shall elect the Executive Vice President.
As
previously stated, there were two (2) simultaneous elections for the Executive Vice
President for the 2009-2011 term – one was called and presided over by EVP
Vinluan in the Board Room of the IBP National Office, while the other election
for the same position was presided over by outgoing IBP Pres. Bautista in
another room of the same building, at the same time, 9:00 A.M., on the same
date, May 9, 2009.
Those
present at the meeting of the Vinluan Group were:
1.
Atty. Elpidio G. Soriano
2.
Atty. Benjamin B. Lanto
3. Atty. Amador Tolentino, Jr.,
Governor-elect for Southern Luzon
4. Atty. Jose V. Cabrera,
Governor-elect for Bicolandia
5. Atty. Erwin Fortunato,
Governor-elect for Western Visayas
6. Atty. Roland B. Inting,
Governor-elect for Eastern Visayas
Since
both Attys. Soriano and Lanto were not validly elected as Governors respectively
of the Greater Manila Region and the Western Mindanao Region, they were
disqualified to sit in the incoming Board of Governors and participate in the
election of the succeeding Executive Vice President. The remaining four (4)
Governors-elect – Governors Tolentino, Cabrera, Fortunato, and Inting, did not
constitute a quorum of the Board of Governors to conduct a valid election of
the IBP Executive Vice President. The election of Atty. Elpidio G. Soriano as
Executive Vice President by the Vinluan Group was invalid. Aside from lack of a
quorum to conduct the elections, EVP Vinluan wrongly presided over the
election. Thus, Atty. Soriano was not duly elected as Governor of the Greater
Manila Region, hence, he is disqualified to sit in the Board of Governors.
Neither
did the meeting of the Bautista Group fare any better, for those present were:
1. Atty. Milagros Fernan-Cayosa,
Governor-elect for Northern
Luzon
2. Atty. Ferdinand Y. Miclat, Governor-elect for
Central Luzon
3. Atty. Manuel M. Maramba, Governor-elect for
Greater Manila
4. Atty. Roan Libarios, Governor-elect for
Eastern Mindanao
5. Atty. Nasser Marohomsalic
Atty.
Marohomsalic’s election as Governor for Western Mindanao was invalid for
violating the rotation rule. The four (4) remaining governors-elect (Attys.
Cayosa, Miclat, Maramba and Libarios) like those in the Vinluan Group, did not
constitute a quorum to conduct the election of the IBP Executive Vice President
for the current term. The election of Governor Roan Libarios as Executive Vice
President by this group was therefore null and void.
Besides
that flaw in his election, since the Eastern Visayas Region, represented by
Governor Jose Aguila Grapilon of Biliran, had succeeded to the presidency in 1997-1999,
its next turn will come after the eight (8) other regions shall have also
served in the presidency. That will be after sixteen years, or, in 2015-2017
yet.
VII. The administrative
complaint against EVP Rogelio A. Vinluan and his Group of Governors (Abelardo
Estrada of Northern Luzon, Bonifacio Barandon of Bicolandia, Evergisto Escalon
of Eastern Visayas, and Raymund Mercado of Western Visayas) is meritorious, for their conduct was fractious and
high-handed, causing disunity and acrimonious disagreements in the IBP.
1.
The request of the EVP Vinluan’s Group for a special meeting of the Board of
Governors on April 23, 2009 – two (2) days before the scheduled election of the
regional Governors on April 25, 2009 – when IBP Pres. Bautista was in Zamboanga
on IBP business, and the other Governors had just returned to their respective
regions to prepare for the April 25 election of the regional governors, was
unreasonable.
The
special meeting on April 23, 2009 which he himself presided over, violated Sec.
42, Art. VI of the By-Laws which provides that it is the President who shall call a special meeting, and it is
also the President who shall preside over
the meeting, not Atty. Vinluan (Sec. 50, Art. VII, By-Laws).
The
proper recourse for the Vinluan Group, in view of President Bautista’s refusal
to call a special meeting as requested by them, is found in Section 43, Art. VI
of the By-Laws which provides that-
“The
Board may take action, without a
meeting, by resolution signed by at least five Governors provided that
every member of the Board shall have been previously apprised of the contents
of the resolution.”
But the Vinluan Group ignored that
procedure. They held a special meeting on April 23, 2009, where they adopted
Resolution No. XVIII-2009 (Special-23 April 2009) striking out as ultra vires the earlier Resolution No.
XVIII-2009 passed in the regular monthly meeting of the Board of Governors on
April 17, 2009. That meeting was illegal, hence, the resolution adopted therein
was null and void.
2.
The second special meeting held by the Vinluan Group on April 30, 2009 wherein
they approved Resolution XVIII-2009 (Special-A-30 April 2009) resolving the
election protests in the GMR, Western Visayas and Western Mindanao governors’
elections, with complete disregard for the protestees’ right to due process,
was likewise illegal, hence, the Group’s resolution of the election protests
was likewise null and void, and the new election of the GMR Governor which they
set on May 4, 2009 was invalid.
3.
The “Board Resolution” which was adopted and faxed to the Governors-elect on
May 8, 2009, by the Vinluan Group, setting the election of the IBP Executive
Vice President on May 9, 2009, at 9:00 A.M.; declaring Pres. Bautista “unfit to
preside” over the election and “designating EVP Vinluan to preside over the
election” in lieu of Pres. Bautista, was uncalled and unwarranted, and caused
disunity and disorder in the IBP. It was in effect a coup to unseat Pres. Bautista before the end of his term, and
prematurely install EVP Vinluan as president.
The
actuations of Atty. Vinluan’s Group in defying the lawful authority of IBP
President Bautista, due to Atty. Vinluan’s overweening desire to propel his
fraternity brother, Atty. Elpidio G. Soriano, to the next presidency of the
IBP, smacked of politicking, which is strongly condemned and strictly
prohibited by the IBP By-Laws and the Bar Integration Rule.[6]
Again,
it must be noted that while the pending administrative case against Atty.
Vinluan and his co-respondents has not yet been resolved, Atty. Vinluan was not
allowed to assume his position as President of the IBP for 2009-2011. Instead,
the Supreme Court designated retired Supreme Court Associate Justice Santiago
Kapunan as Officer-in-Charge of the IBP.
III. Rulings of the Court
The
Court completely agrees with the recommendations of the Special Committee with
respect to, among others, the following:
1.
Declaring Atty. Manuel M. Maramba (Manila III Chapter) as the duly elected
Governor of the Greater Manila Region for the 2009-2011 term[7];
and,
2.
Declaring Atty. Erwin M. Fortunato (Romblon Chapter) as the duly elected
Governor of the Western Visayas Region for the 2009-2011 term[8].
As
far as the Court is concerned, there is no dispute that the election of Atty.
Maramba was in order. During the election held last April 25, 2009 which was
duly presided over by then outgoing Greater Manila Region Governor Marcial
Magsino, it was Atty. Maramba who garnered the highest number of votes among
the delegates compared to Atty. Soriano, 13 votes to 12 votes. However, instead
of accepting the said defeat graciously, Atty. Soriano then filed an election
protest on April 27, 2009 claiming that the said election was void because
there were non-delegates, particularly Attys. Loanzon and Laqui of the Quezon
City Chapter, who were allowed to vote. Consequently, Atty. Soriano got a
favorable ruling from the group of Atty. Vinluan, as EVP, and former Governors
Estrada (Northern Luzon), Barandon, Jr. (Bicolandia), Escalon (Eastern Visayas)
and Mercado (Western Visayas) per Resolution No. XVIII-2009 (Special A-30 April
2009). This then resulted in the anomalous election of Atty. Soriano as
Governor of the Greater Manila Region last May 4, 2009.
In
addressing the said controversy, and as already discussed, the Committee
concluded that “the Vinluan Group’s interpretation of Sec. 31, Art. V, of the
By-Laws in Resolution No. XVIII-2009 (Special-23 April 2009) to be in error and
devoid of rational and historical bases.” It was then pointed out that “(t)he
argument of the QC-Chapter President Tranquil Salvador, (as well as by Atty.
Soriano), that Attys. Loanzon and Laqui were not delegates because they were
not elected by the QC-Board of Officers, is not well taken.” Likewise, the Committee
considered the situation then involving the Quezon City Chapter as “not a
‘proper case’ for the election of additional delegates by the Board of Officers
because the Chapter is entitled to the same number of delegates (11) to the
House (of Delegates), as the number of officers in its Board of Officers. Its
officers are ipso facto the Chapter’s
delegates to the House. There is no need for the Board of Officers to conduct
an election.”
Thus,
and as rightly determined by the Committee to which the Court subscribes to,
“the election of Atty. Soriano (QC Chapter) in the special election that was
presided over by EVP Vinluan on May 4, 2009, was a nullity on three (3)
grounds: First, because Atty. Soriano already lost the election on April 25,
2009. Second, the special election conducted by the Vinluan Group on May 4,
2(009) was illegal because it was not called nor presided by the regional
Governor (Atty. Magsino). Third, Atty. Soriano is disqualified to run for GMR
Governor for the 2009-2011 term because his “election” as such would violate
the rotation rule which the Supreme Court requires to be “strictly
implemented”.” This being so, since he was not a duly elected Governor of the
Greater Manila Region, then Atty. Soriano cannot be voted as well as IBP Executive
Vice President for 2009-2011.
With
respect to the case of Atty. Fortunato, his election as Governor for the
Western Visayas Region was upheld since “he obtained the highest number of
votes among the three (3) candidates for the position” and “also because under
the rotation rule, it is now the turn of the Romblon Chapter to represent the
Western Visayas Region in the IBP Board of Governors.” On account thereof, the
Court is convinced that the contentions of protestees Attys. Cornelio Aldon
(Antique Chapter) and Benjamin Ortega (Negros Occidental Chapter) cannot
prosper. After all, the Court already upheld per its Resolution in Bar Matter
No. 586 dated May 16, 1991 that the “rotation rule” under Sections 37 and 39 of
the IBP By-Laws “shall be strictly implemented so that all prior elections for
governor in the region shall be reckoned with or considered in determining who
should be the governor to be selected from the different chapters to represent
the region in the Board of Governors.” More so, when the concerned chapter
invoked its right thereto as in the case of Atty. Fortunato who came from the
Romblon Chapter which was next in the rotation.
To
the Court, the election of Atty. Fortunato as Governor last April 25, 2009 is
well-settled. He did not only come from the chapter which is entitled to be
elected for the said position, but also got the highest number of votes among
the candidates that included protestees Attys. Aldon and Ortega. As the
election was presided over by then outgoing Governor Raymund Mercado, the Court
finds no cogent reason as well to reverse the findings of the Committee insofar
as upholding the election of Atty. Fortunato is concerned. Suffice it to say,
the Committee was correct in not finding any anomaly with respect thereto.
On the nullification of the election
of Atty. Nasser Marohomsalic as Governor for the Western Mindanao Region, the
Court does not agree with the recommendation of the Committee to hold a special
election in the said region[9].
Instead, the Court rules to uphold the election of Atty. Marohomsalic last
April 25, 2009 which was presided over by then outgoing Governor Carlos Valdez,
Jr.
It
must be pointed out that Atty. Marohomsalic was duly nominated by Atty. Alex
Macalawi, President of the Lanao del Sur Chapter, and the official delegate of
the said chapter to the House of Delegates for the Western Mindanao Region
during the elections held last April 25, 2009. On the other hand, Atty.
Benjamin Lanto was supposedly nominated by the Board of Officers of the Lanao
del Sur Chapter, except Atty. Macalawi, in Resolution No. 002-2009 dated
February 28, 2009. However, it appears that, as discovered by the Committee,
“three (3) signatories of the resolution” apparently “resigned as members of
the Board of Officers” since they are prosecutors who are “ineligible for
election or appointment to any position in the Integrated Bar or any Chapter
thereof”, while “(s)ix (6) other signatories of the resolution” allegedly
“recalled their signatures” and they, instead, “signed an ‘authorization’
authorizing the Chapter President, Atty. Macalawi, “to select and vote” “for
the Regional Governor for Western Mindanao”.” Thus, “(t)he withdrawal of nine
(9) signatures from the Resolution No. 002, left only four (4) votes in support
of Lanto’s nomination – a puny minority of the 14-member Board of Officers of
the Lanao del Sur Chapter.” [10]
The attempt of Atty. Vinluan and his
group of Governors to nullify the election of Atty. Marohomsalic through
Resolution No. XVIII-2009 (Special A-30 April 2009) was clearly irregular and
unjustified. Based on the April 25, 2009 election results, Atty. Marohomsalic
won over his rival Atty. Lanto, 6 votes to 5 votes. Consequently, he was duly
proclaimed as the elected Governor of the Western Mindanao Region. On April 27,
2009, Atty. Lanto filed an election
protest, “questioning the validity of Atty. Marohomsalic’s nomination by Atty.
Macalawi, President of the IBP Lanao del Sur Chapter, and claiming that his (Lanto’s) nomination by the Board of Officers of the Lanao del Sur
Chapter was the valid nomination.”
Immediately, on April 30, 2009, the
group of Atty. Vinluan issued Resolution No. XVIII-2009 proclaiming Atty. Lanto
as the duly elected Governor without affording Atty. Marohomsalic his right to
due process. More importantly, instead
of calling for another election like what it did for the Greater Manila Region,
the group of Atty. Vinluan proceeded to instantly declare Atty. Lanto as having
been duly elected “on the ground that the nomination of the protestee, Nasser
Marohomsalic, was contrary to the will of the Lanao del Sur Chapter expressed
through Board Resolution No. 00(2)-2009 of the Board of Officers (of the Lanao
del Sur Chapter).”[11]
As borne out by the records, Atty.
Marohomsalic was duly nominated by Atty. Alex Macalawi, President of the Lanao
del Sur Chapter, and the official delegate of the said chapter to the House of
Delegates for the Western Mindanao Region during the elections. On the other
hand, Atty. Lanto was supposedly nominated by the Board of Officers of the same
Chapter in a resolution dated February 28, 2009, which was not signed and
approved by Atty. Macalawi.
However, and as already pointed out
by the Committee, the “withdrawal of nine (9) signatures from the Resolution
No. 002, left only four (4) votes in support of Lanto’s nomination – a puny
minority of the 14-member Board of Officers of the Lanao del Sur Chapter.”[12]
Thus, the Committee, citing Sec. 37,
Art. VI of the By-Laws, clearly
repudiated and overturned Resolution
No. XVIII-2009 (Special A- 30 April
2009) of Atty. Vinluan and his group of
Governors. In its Report, it declared that
the “nominee of the Chapter President, not the nominee of the Board of
Officers, is the valid nominee for Governor of the Region,”[13]
thereby sustaining the position of Atty. Marohomsalic and, in effect, the validity of his nomination by Atty.
Macalawi.
Despite the said findings, Atty.
Marohomsalic was stripped of his electoral mandate and victory when the
Committee, invoking the strict application of the “rotation rule,” proceeded to
altogether nullify the result of the elections duly conducted on April 25,
2009. According to the Committee,
neither Lanto nor Marohomsalic is qualified to be elected governor because it
was not the turn of Lanao del Sur chapter to represent the Western Mindanao
Region in the Board of Governors for the 2009-2011 term. As declared in the
Report --
However, under the rotation rule, it is not the Lanao del Sur Chapter that
should represent the Western Mindanao Region in the Board of Governors for the
2009-2011 term. The record of the IBP National Secretariat shows that,
starting in 1993-1995 when the strict implementation of the rotation rule
began, the 12 –chapter Western Mindanao Region has been represented in the
Board of Governors only six (6) Chapters, as follows:
1993-1995---Lanao
del Sur-----Dimnatang T. Saro
1995-1997---Cotatabato---------George
C. Jabido
1997-1999---ZAMBASULTA—Arthur
D. Lim
1999-2001---ZAMBASULTA---Paulino
R. Ersando
2001-2003---North
Cotabato---- Little Sarah A. Agdeppa
2003-2005---Sultan
Kudarat-----Carlos L. Valdez, Jr.
2005-2007---SOCSARGEN-----Rogelio
C. Garcia
2007-2009---Sultan
Kudarat-----Carlos L. Valdez, Jr.
Therefore,
pursuant to the strict rotation rule, the Lanao del Sur Chapter must wait for
the six (6) other Chapters in the region (Zamboanga Sibugay, Zamboanga del
Norte, Zamboanga del Sur, Lanao del Norte, Misamis Occidental, and
Maguindanao-Cotabato City) to have their turn in the Board of Governors before
Lanao del Sur may again represent the Western Mindanao Region in the Board of
Governors.
Since
both Attys. Nasser Marohomsalic and Benjamin Lanto belong to the Lanao del Sur
Chapter, both of them are disqualified to be elected as Governor of the Western
Mindanao Region for the 2009-2011 term.
The ruling of the Committee insofar
as it nullified the election of Atty. Marohomsalic as Governor of the Western
Mindanao Region cannot be sustained for not being in full accord with facts and
the rules. While the Committee may have correctly pointed out that under the
rotation rule it was not yet the turn of IBP Lanao del Sur Chapter to represent
the region in the Board of Governors for the 2009-2011 term, it does not
necessarily follow that the result of the elections should be altogether
nullified on that ground. Evidently, and as determined by the Committee itself,
there are instances when the “rotation rule” was not followed insofar as the
elections in 1999 and 2007 were concerned with respect to the Western Mindanao
Region.
In the regular election of April 25,
2009, there is no dispute that the voting delegates of IBP Western Mindanao
Region voted into office Atty. Marohomsalic of Lanao del Sur Chapter as
Governor for the 2009-2011 term. During the said election, his only rival was
Atty. Benjamin Lanto who also belongs to the same Lanao del Sur Chapter. A
third candidate, Atty. Escobar from the Sarangani Chapter, was nominated but he
declined the nomination.
While the Committee points out that
six (6) chapters in the region, including Sarangani, are entitled to precedence
over the Lanao del Sur chapter in the order of rotation, the fact remains that not one of them nominated or fielded a
candidate from their respective ranks during the April 25, 2009 election. Neither did any one of them challenge the
nominations of the Lanao del Sur Chapter based on the order of rotation.
By not fielding a candidate for
Governor and by declining the nomination raised in favor of its Chapter President
(Atty. Escobar), the IBP Sarangani Chapter is deemed to have waived its turn in
the rotation order. The same can be said of the remaining chapters. They too
are deemed to have waived their turn in the rotation as they opted not to field
or nominate a candidate from among their respective members. Neither did they
invoke the rotation rule to challenge the nominations from the Lanao del Sur
Chapter. On the contrary, they fully expressed their concurrence to the cited
nominations, which may be interpreted as a waiver of their right to take their
turn to represent the region in the Board of Governors for the 2009-2011 term.
It need not be stressed that, as
cited by the Committee itself, there were instances when the Governor of the
Western Mindanao Region came from the same chapter such as ZAMBASULTA
(1997-1999 & 1999-2001) and Sultan Kudarat (2003-2005 & 2007-2009).
Thus, Atty. Marohomsalic could not be faulted if the other chapters opted not to
field or nominate their own candidates. Having been validly nominated and duly
proclaimed as the duly elected Governor of Western Mindanao, Atty. Marohomsalic
therefore deserves to assume his position during the remainder of the term.
It would have been a different story
if another Chapter in the order of rotation fielded its own candidate or
invoked the rotation rule to challenge Atty. Marohomsalic’s nomination. But the
record is bereft of any showing that his nomination and subsequent election was
challenged on that basis. If there was any challenge at all, it merely referred
to his nomination by Atty. Macalawi which the Committee itself has found to be
in order. Thus, no compelling reason exists to disregard the electoral mandate
and nullify the will of the voting delegates as expressed through the ballot.
The “rotation rule” is not absolute but subject to waiver as when the chapters in the order of
rotation opted not to field or nominate their own candidates for Governor
during the election regularly done for that purpose. If a validly nominated
candidate obtains the highest number of votes in the election conducted, his
electoral mandate deserves to be respected unless obtained through fraud as
established by evidence. Such is not the case here.
Suffice it to say, the “rotation rule” should
be applied in harmony with, and not in derogation of, the sovereign will of the
electorate as expressed through the ballot.
Thus, Atty. Marohomsalic cannot be divested and deprived of his
electoral mandate and victory. The order of rotation is not a rigid and inflexible
rule as to bar its relaxation in exceptional and compelling circumstances.
If only to stress, compared to the
case of Atty. Fortunato whose Romblon Chapter invoked the “rotation rule,” no
chapter in the Western Mindanao Region which was next in the rotation invoked
the said rule.
Now, in its Report, the Committee
nullified the elections for the IBP EVP separately and simultaneously conducted
by President Bautista and EVP Vinluan on May 9, 2009 and called for a special
election[14] for the
same. In the case of the election conducted by EVP Vinluan, the results were
nullified for lack of authority to preside over the election and for lack
quorum, citing the disqualification of Attys. Soriano and Lanto to sit in the
incoming Board of Governors. The finding
deserves to be sustained.
In the same Report, the Committee
also nullified the result of the election for the incoming EVP conducted by
President Bautista. While
recognizing President Bautista’s authority
to conduct the election, the Committee nonetheless nullified the election results for lack of
quorum, citing the ineligibility of Atty. Marohomsalic to sit in the incoming
Board of Governors, thereby leaving only four (out of nine) Governors-elect in
attendance which did not constitute a quorum.
With the election of Atty.
Marohomsalic as Governor of Western Mindanao being deemed valid, then the
defect of lack of quorum that supposedly tainted the election proceedings for
EVP separately conducted by IBP President Bautista may have been cured, five (5)
Governors being sufficient to constitute a quorum.
Be that as it may, the recommendation
of the Committee to hold a special election for the EVP for the remaining
2009-2011 term deserves to be upheld to
heal the divisions in the IBP and promote unity by enabling all the nine (9)
Governors-elect to elect the EVP in a
unified meeting called for that purpose. This will enable matters to start on a
clean and correct slate, free from the politicking and the under handed tactics
that have characterized the IBP elections for so long.
In the conduct of the unified
election of the incoming EVP, the following findings and recommendations of the
Committee shall be adopted:
THE
ROTATION OF THE
PRESIDENCY
AMONG THE REGIONS-
Sec. 47, Art. VII of the By-Laws, as
amended by Bar Matter 491, Oct. 6, 1989, provides that the Executive Vice
President shall be chosen by the Board of Governors from among the nine (9)
regional governors. The Executive Vice President shall automatically become
President for the next succeeding term. The Presidency shall rotate among the nine Regions.”
The
list of national presidents furnished the Special Committee by the IBP National
Secretariat, shows that the governors of the following regions were President of
the IBP during the past nine (9) terms
(1991-2009):
Numeriano Tanopo, Jr.
(Pangasinan)…Central Luzon…1991-1993
Mervin G. Encanto (Quezon City)…
Greater Manila 1993-1995
Raul R. Anchangco (Makati)…Southern
Luzon…1995-1997
Jose Aguila Grapilon (Biliran)…
Eastewrn Visayas … 1997-1999
Arthur D. Lim ( Zambasulta)…Western
Mindanao…1999-2001
Teofilo S. Pilando, Jr. (Kalinga
Apayao)…Northern Luzon…2001-2003
Jose Anselmo L. Cadiz (Camarines
Sur)…Bicolandia…2005-Aug. 2006
Jose Vicente B. Salazar
(Albay)…Bicolandia… Aug. 2006-2007
Feliciano M. Bautista
(Pangasinan)…Central Luzon…2007-2009
Only the Governors of the Western
Visayas and Eastern Mindanao regions have not yet had their turn as Executive
Vice President cum next IBP President, while Central Luzon and Bicolandia have
had two (2) terms already.
Therefore, either the governor of the
Western Visayas Region, or the governor of the Eastern Mindanao Region should
be elected as Executive Vice President for the 2009-2011 term.
Accordingly, a special election shall
be held by the present nine-man IBP Board of Governors to elect the EVP for the
remainder of the term of 2009-2011, which shall be presided over and conducted
by IBP Officer-in-Charge Justice Santiago Kapunan (Ret.) within seven (7) days
from notice.
Further, in its report, the Committee
declared that “the high-handed and divisive tactics of Atty. Rogelio A. Vinluan
and his group of Governors, Abelardo
Estrada, Bonifacio Barandon Jr., Evergisto Escalon, and Raymund Mercado, which
disrupted the peaceful and orderly flow of business in the IBP, caused chaos in
the National Office, bitter disagreements, and ill-feelings, and almost
disintegrated the Integrated Bar, constituted
grave professional misconduct which should be appropriately sanctioned to discourage
its repetition in the future.” [15]
The Committee, however, fell short of
determining and recommending the appropriate penalty for the grave professional
misconduct found to have been committed by Atty. Vinluan and his group of Governors.
Still, with the above firm and unequivocal findings and declarations of the
Committee against Atty. Vinluan and his group that included Attys. Estrada,
Barandon, Jr., Escalon and Mercado as “unprofessional” members of the IBP Board
of Governors (2007-2009 term) they certainly do not deserve to hold such
esteemed positions.
It has long been held that, as
provided for in Rule 1.01, Canon 1 of the Code of Professional Responsibility[16]
that “(a) lawyer shall not engage in unlawful, dishonest, immoral or deceitful
conduct.” Added to this, Rule 7.03, Canon 7 requires that “(a) lawyer shall not
engage in conduct that adversely reflects on his fitness to practice law, nor
shall he whether in public or private life, behave in a scandalous manner to
the discredit of the legal profession.” In the case at bar, such canons find
application.
In addition, it was clear to the
Committee, and the Court agrees, that “(t)he actuations of Atty. Vinluan’s
Group in defying the lawful authority of IBP President Bautista, due to Atty.
Vinluan’s overweening desire to propel his fraternity brother, Atty. Elpidio G.
Soriano, to the next presidency of the IBP, smacked of politicking, which is
strongly condemned and strictly prohibited by the IBP By-Laws and the Bar
Integration Rule.” Indeed, said actuations of Atty. Vinluan and his group of
former IBP Governors Estrada, Barandon, Jr., Escalon and Mercado were grossly
inimical to the interest of the IBP and were violative of their solemn oath as
lawyers. After all, what they did served only to benefit the apparently selfish
goals of defeated candidate Atty. Elpidio Soriano to be elected as IBP EVP and
be the next IBP President for the 2011-2013 term by hook or by crook.
Bearing the above in mind, what
Attys. Vinluan, Estrada, Barandon, Jr., Escalon and Mercado conspired to do was
truly “high-handed and divisive” that must not pass unsanctioned. Otherwise,
future leaders of the IBP, Governors at that, might be similarly inclined to do
what they did, much to the prejudice of the IBP and its membership. Surely,
this should be addressed without much delay so as to nip-in-the-bud such gross
misconduct and unprofessionalism. They all deserve to suffer the same fate for
betraying as well the trust bestowed on them for the high positions that they
previously held.
The Resolution of the Court in the
case of Re: 1989 Elections of the
Integrated Bar of the Philippines[17] already declared that unethical
practices of lawyers during IBP elections cannot but result in the stature of
the IBP as an association of the practitioners of a noble and honored
profession being diminished. As held therein, “(r)espect for law is gravely
eroded when lawyers themselves, who are supposed to be minions of the law,
engage in unlawful practices and cavalierly brush aside the very rules that the
IBP formulated for their observance.” [18]
Indeed, the said strong and vigorous declaration of this Court on the 1989 IBP
Election scandal is relevant here.
While Atty. Vinluan and his group deserve to be stripped of their positions in the IBP, this can no longer be done as their terms as Governors already expired, specially on the part of Attys. Estrada, Barandon, Jr., Escalon and Mercado. However, in the case of Atty. Vinluan, as former EVP of the IBP he would have automatically succeeded to the presidency for the term 2009-2011 but now should not be allowed to. After all, and considering the findings of the Committee, he has clearly manifested his unworthiness to hold the said post. On account thereof, Atty. Vinluan is thus declared unfit to assume the position of IBP President. To the Court, if Atty. Vinluan cannot be fit to become a Governor and EVP of the IBP then he is not entitled to succeed as its President for the 2009-2011 term.
Also, Atty. Vinluan and his group should no longer be allowed to run as national officers to prevent such similar irregularity from happening again. Thus, in subsequent elections of the IBP, they are disqualified to run as candidates.
On the recommendation of the
Committee to amend Sections 31[19],
33, par. (g) [20], 39[21],
42[22],
and 43[23],
Article VI and Section 47[24],
Article VII of the IBP By-Laws, the Court finds the same in order. As such, and
in order to immediately effect reforms in the IBP, particularly in the holding
of its elections for national officers, the subject amendments are hereby
adopted and approved.
WHEREFORE,
premises considered, the Court resolves that:
1.
The elections of Attys. Manuel M. Maramba, Erwin M. Fortunato and Nasser A.
Marohomsalic as Governors for the Greater Manila Region, Western Visayas Region
and Western Mindanao Region, respectively, for the term 2009-2011 are UPHELD;
2.
A special election to elect the IBP Executive Vice President for the 2009-2011
term is hereby ORDERED to be held under the supervision of this Court within
seven (7) days from receipt of this Resolution with Attys. Maramba, Fortunato
and Marohomsalic being allowed to represent and vote as duly-elected Governors
of their respective regions;
3.
Attys. Rogelio Vinluan, Abelardo Estrada, Bonifacio Barandon, Jr., Evergisto
Escalon and Raymund Mercado are all found GUILTY of grave professional
misconduct arising from their actuations in connection with the controversies
in the elections in the IBP last April 25, 2009 and May 9, 2009 and are hereby
disqualified to run as national officers of the IBP in any subsequent election.
While their elections as Governors for the term 2007-2009 can no longer be
annulled as this has already expired, Atty. Vinluan is declared unfit to hold
the position of IBP Executive Vice President for the 2007-2009 term and
therefore barred from succeeding as IBP President for the 2009-2011 term;
4.
The proposed amendments to Sections 31, 33, par. (g), 39, 42, and 43, Article
VI and Section 47, Article VII of the IBP By-Laws as contained in the Report
and Recommendation of the Special Committee dated July 9, 2009 are hereby
approved and adopted; and
5.
The designation of retired SC Justice Santiago Kapunan as Officer-in-Charge of the
IBP shall continue, unless earlier revoked by the Court, but not to extend
beyond June 30, 2011.
SO ORDERED.
RENATO
C. CORONA
Chief Justice
WE CONCUR:
I join the dissenting opinion
of J. Velasco
ANTONIO T. CARPIO
Associate Justice |
(No part) CONCHITA
CARPIO MORALES
Associate Justice |
On official leave but left dissenting opinion. See dissenting opinion. PRESBITERO J.
VELASCO, JR. Associate Justice |
(No part) ANTONIO EDUARDO
B. NACHURA Associate Justice
|
TERESITA J. LEONARDO-DE CASTRO Associate Justice
|
I certify that J. Brion
filed his concurring vote: ARTURO D. BRION
Associate Justice |
(No part)
DIOSDADO M. PERALTA Associate Justice (No part)
MARIANO C. DEL CASTILLO Associate Justice |
LUCAS P. BERSAMIN Associate Justice
ROBERTO A. ABAD Associate Justice |
MARTIN
S. VILLARAMA, JR. JOSE PORTUGAL PEREZ
Associate Justice
Associate Justice
(No part)
JOSE
CATRAL MENDOZA MARIA LOURDES P. A. SERENO
Associate Justice Associate Justice
* On
official leave but left dissenting opinion.
** On
sick leave but left concurring vote.
[1]
Composed of Justice
Carolina C. Griño-Aquino (Ret.), as Chairman, and Justices Bernardo P. Pardo
(Ret.) and Romeo J. Callejo, Sr. (Ret.), as Members.
[2]
Report and Recommendation
dated July 9, 2009, pp. 4-5.
[3] Ibid, p. 6.
[4] Ibid, pp. 7-8.
[5]
Ibid, pp. 8-9.
[6] Ibid, pp. 21-28.
[7] Letter G, Report and Recommendation dated July
9, 2009.
[8] Letter H, Report and Recommendation dated July
9, 2009.
[9]
Letter (I), Report and
Recommendation dated July 9, 2009.
[10] Report
and Recommendation dated July 9, 2009, pp. 14-15.
[11]
Ibid, p. 17.
[12] Ibid, pp. 14-15.
[13] Ibid,
p. 24.
[14]
Letter J, Report and
Recommendation dated July 9, 2009.
[15] Letter K, Report and Recommendation dated July
9, 2009.
[16] Promulgated on June 21, 1988.
[17]
178 SCRA 398.
[18] Re: 1989 Elections of the Integrated Bar of
the Philippines, 178 SCRA 398, 418.
[19]
Letter A, Report and
Recommendation dated July 9, 2009.
[20]
Letter B, Report and
Recommendation dated July 9, 2009.
[21]
Letter C, Report and
Recommendation dated July 9, 2009.
[22]
Letter C, Report and
Recommendation dated July 9, 2009.
[23] Letter
E, Report and Recommendation dated July 9, 2009.
[24] Letter
F, Report and Recommendation dated July 9, 2009.