Republic Act No. 9485             June 02, 2007

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    Republic of the Philippines

    SUPREME COURTManila

    EN BANC

    G.R. No. 106971 October 20, 1992

    TEOFISTO T. GUINGONA, JR., AND LAKAS-NATIONAL UNION OF CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATS (LAKAS-NUCD),petitioners,vs.NEPTALI A. GONZALES, ALBERTO ROMULO and WIGBERTO E. TAADA, respondents.

    NATIONALIST PEOPLE'S COALITION,petitioner-in-intervention.

    CAMPOS, JR., J.:

    This is a petition for Prohibition to prohibit respondents Senator Alberto Romulo and Wigberto Taada from sitting and assuming theposition of members of the Commission on Appointments and to prohibit Senators Neptali Gonzales, as ex-officio Chairman, of saidCommission from recognizing and allowing the respondent senators to sit as members thereof.

    As a result of the national elections held last May 11, 1992, the Senate is composed of the following members or Senators representing

    the respective political affiliations:

    LDP 15 senators

    NPC 5 senatorsLAKAS-NUCD 3 senatorsLP-PDP-LABAN 1 senator

    Applying the mathematical formula agreed to by the parties as follow as:

    No. of senators of a political party x 12 seats

    Total no. of senators elected

    the resulting composition of the senate based on the rule of proportional representation of each political party with elected

    representatives in the Senate, is as follows:

    Political Party/ Proportional

    Political Coalition Membership RepresentativesLDP 15 7.5 members

    NPC 5 2.5 membersLAKAS-NUCD 3 1.5 members

    LP-PDP-LABAN 1 .5 members

    At the organization meeting of the Senate held on August 27, 1992, Senator Romulo in his capacity as Majority Floor Leader nominated,

    for and in his behalf of the LDP, eight (8) senators for membership in the Commission on Appointments, namely Senators Angara,Herrera, Alvarez, Aquino, Mercado, Ople, Sotto and Romulo. The nomination of the eight senators 2 was objected to by Petitioner,Senator Guingona, as Minority Floor Leader, and Senator John Osmea, in representation of the NPC. To resolve the impasse, SenatorArturo Tolentino proposed a compromise to the effect that Senate elect 3

    . . . 12 members to the Commission on Appointments, eight coming from the LDP, two coming from NPC, onecoming from the Liberal Party, with the understanding that there are strong reservations against this proportion of

    these numbers so that if later on in action in the Supreme Court, if any party is found to have an excess in

    representation, and if any party is found to have a deficiency in representation, that party will be entitled to nominateand have elected by this body its additional representatives.

    The proposed compromise above stated was a temporary arrangement and, inspite of the objections of Senator Guingona and

    Osmea, to enable the Commission on Appointments to be organized by the election of its members, it was approved. Theelected members consisted of eight LDP, one LP-PDP-LABAN, two NPC and one LAKAS-NUCD.

    On September 23, 1992, Senator Teofisto Guingona. Jr., in his behalf and in behalf of Lakas-National Union of Christian Democrats(LAKAS-NUCD), filed a petition for the issuance of a writ of prohibition to prohibit the respondent Senate President Neptali Gonzales, as

    ex-officio Chairman of the Commission on Appointments, from recognizing the membership of Senators Alberto Romulo as the eightsenator elected by the LDP, and Wigberto E. Taada, as the lone member representing the LP-PDP-LABAN, in the Commission on

    Appointments, on the ground that the proposed compromise of Senator Tolentino was violative of the rule of proportional representation,and that it is the right of the minority political parties in the Senate, consistent with the Constitution, 4 to combine their fractional

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    representation in the Commission on Appointments to complete one seat therein, and to decide who, among the senators in their ranks,

    shall be additionally nominated and elected thereto.

    Section 18 Article VI of the Constitution of 1987 provides fro the creation of a Commission on Appointments and the allocation of its

    membership, as follows:

    Sec. 18. There shall be a Commission on Appointments consisting of the President of the Senate as ex-officioChairman, twelve members of the House of Representatives, elected by each house on the basis of proportionalrepresentation from the political parties or organizations registered under the party list system represented therein. The

    Chairman of the Commission shall not vote except in case of a tie. The Commission shall act on all appointmentssubmitted to it within the session days of the Congress from their submission of all the members. (Emphasis supplied.)

    Based on the mathematical computation of proportional representation of the various political parties with elected senators in the senatorsin the Senate, each of these political parties is entitled to a fractional membership in the Commission on Appointments as stated in thefirst paragraph of this decision.5 Each political party has a claim to an extra half seat, and the election of respondents Senator Romuloand Senator Taada to the Commission on Appointments by the LDP majority is precisely questioned by the petitioners because,

    according to them, it unduly increased the membership of LDP and LP-PDP-LABAN in the commission and reduced the membership ofthe LAKAS-NUCD and NPC correspondingly. In view of the conflicting claims of each of the political parties/coalition duly representedin the Senate to a fractional membership in the Commission on Appointments, the election of respondents Senator Romulo and SenatorTaada has become controversial and its validity questionable. Hence, this petition. It has been established that the legality of filling up

    the membership of the Commission on Appointments is a justiciable issue and not a political question. 6

    We deem it necessary to resolve the respondents' argument as to the nature of the instant petition. There is no doubt that the issues

    involved herein are constitutional in nature and are of vital importance to our nation. They involve the interpretation of Section 18, ArticleVI of the Constitution which creates a Commission on Appointments. Where constitutional issues are properly raised in the context of the

    alleged facts, procedural questions acquire a relatively minor significance 7 and the "transcendental importance to the public of the casedemands that they be settled promptly and definitely brushing aside . . . technicalities of procedure". 8

    For the purpose of resolving the case at bar, the instant petition may be regarded as one of prohibition 9 wherein the Senate is claimed tohave acted without or in excess of its jurisdiction when it designated respondent Senator Romulo as eighth member of the Commission onAppointments, upon nomination by the LDP, and respondent Senator Taada as LP nominee, notwithstanding, that, in both instance, LDPand LP are each entitled only to "half a member". In the alternative, the petition may be regarded as one for mandamus, 10 in which it isclaimed that the LAKAS-NUCD and NPC were unlawfully excluded from the use and enjoyment of a right or office to which each isentitled. Considering the importance of the case at bar and in keeping with the Court's duty under the Constitution to keep the other

    branches of the government within the limits of the Constitution and the laws of the land, this Court has decided to brush aside legaltechnicalities of procedure and take cognizance of this case.

    The issues for determination by this Court may be stated as follows:

    1) Whether the election of Senators Alberto Romulo and Wigberto E. Taada as members of the Commission on

    Appointments is in accordance with the provision of Section 18 of Article VI of the 1987 Constitution.

    2) If said membership of the respondent senators in the Commission is violative of the Constitutional provision, did

    the respondent Senate act in grave abuse of discretion in electing the respondent Senators?

    3) If there was grave abuse of discretion by respondent Senate, acting through the LDP majority, should a writ of

    prohibition enjoining, prohibiting and restraining respondent Senators from sitting as members of and participating inthe proceeding of the Commission on Appointments be issued?

    It is an established fact to which all the parties agree that the mathematical representation of each of the political parties represented in theSenate is as follows:

    LDP 7.5

    NPC .5

    LAKAS-NUCD 2.5

    LP-PDP-LABAN 1.5

    It is also a fact accepted by all such parties that each of them entitled to a fractional membership on the basis of the rule onproportional representation of each of the political parties. A literal interpretation of Section 18 of Article VI of the Constitution

    leads to no other manner of application than as above. The problem is what to do with the fraction of .5 or 1/2 to which each ofthe parties is entitled. The LDP majority in the Senate converted a fractional half membership into a whole membership of one

    senator by adding one half or .5 to 7.5 to be able to elect Senator Romulo. In so doing one other party's fractional membershipwas correspondingly reduced leaving the latter's representation in the Commission on Appointments to less than their

    proportional representation in the Senate. This is clearly a violation of Section 18 because it is no longer in compliance with itsmandate that membership in the Commission be based on the proportional representation of the political parties. The election ofSenator Romulo gave more representation to the LDP and reduced the representation of one political party either theLAKAS-NUCD or the NPC.

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    On the claim of Senator Taada that under the ruling in the case of Senator Lorenzo Taada, 11 and the cases of Senator Juan PonceEnrile, he has a right to be elected as a member of the Commission on Appointments because of: (a) the physical impossibility of dividinga person, so that the fractional membership must be rounded up into one senator; (b) being the sole elected senator of his party, his party isentitled to be represented in the Commission on Appointments; (c) having been elected senator, rounding up into one full senator hisfractional membership is consistent with the provision and spirit of the Constitution and would be in full accord with the principle of

    republicanism that emphasizes democracy.

    The cases of the two former senators mentioned cannot be invoked as a precedent in support of incumbent Senator Taada's claim to a

    membership in the present Commission on Appointments. In the time of his illustrious father, out of 24 elected senators in the upper

    chamber of Congress, 23 belonged to the Nacionalista Party, while Senator Lorenzo Taada, who belonged to the Citizen's Party, was thelone opposition. By force of circumstance, he became a member of the Commission on Appointments because he alone represented theminority party. Had there been another senator belonging to a party other than the Citizens' Party, this problem of who should sit as the

    sole representative of the opposition party would have arisen. In the case of Senator Ponce Enrile, there were two senators elected fromthe opposition party, namely, he and Senator Estrada. Applying the rule of proportional representation mentioned earlier (see formula), theopposition was entitled to full member (not a fractional membership). Senator Enrile was thus legally nominated and elected as theminority representative in the Senate. In the present case, if there were a political parties in the Senate, and We follow Senators Taada's

    claim that he is entitled to full membership as lone representative of his party, We the anomaly of having 13 senators, where theConstitution allows only twelve (12) in the Commission on Appointments.

    We find the respondents' claim to membership in the Commission on Appointments by nomination and election of the LDP majority inthe Senate as not in accordance with Section 18 of Article VI of the 1987 Constitution and therefore violative of the same because it is not

    in compliance with the requirements that twelve senators shall be elected on the basis of proportional representation of the resultingfractional membership of the political parties represented therein. To disturb the resulting fractional membership of the political parties in

    the Commission on Appointments by adding together two halves to make a whole is a breach of the rule on proportional representation

    because it will give the LDP an added member in the Commission by utilizing the fractional membership of the minority political party,who is deprived of half a representation.

    The provision of Section 18 on proportional representation is mandatory in character and does not leave any discretion to the majority

    party in the Senate to disobey or disregard the rule on proportional representation; otherwise, the party with a majority representation inthe Senate or the House of Representatives can by sheer force of number impose its will on the hapless minority. By requiring a

    proportional representation in the Commission on Appointments, Section 18 in effect works as a check on the majority party in the Senateand helps to maintain the balance of power. No party can claim more than what it is entitled to under such rule. To allow it to elect more

    than its proportional share of members is to confer upon such a party a greater share in the membership in the Commission onAppointments and more power to impose its will on the minority, who by the same token, suffers a diminution of its rightful membership

    in the Commission.

    Section 18, also assures representation in the Commission on Appointments of any political party who succeeds in electing members tothe Senate, provided that the number of senators so elected enables it to put a representative in the Commission on Appointments.

    Drawing from the ruling in the case ofCoseteng vs.Mitra, Jr., 12a political party must have at least two senators in the Senate to be ableto have a representatives in the Commission on Appointments, so that any number less than 2 will not entitle such a party a membership

    in the Commission on Appointments. This applies to the respondent Senator Taada.

    We lay down the following guidelines accordingly:

    1) In the Senate, political party or coalition must have at least two duly elected senators for every seat in theCommission on Appointments.

    2) Where there are more than two political parties represented in the Senate, a political party/coalition with a single

    senator in the Senate cannot constitutionally claims seat in the Commission.

    We do not agree with respondents' claim that it is mandatory to elect 12 Senators to the Commission on Appointments. The

    Constitution does not contemplate that the Commission on Appointments must necessarily include twelve (12) senators andtwelve (12) members of the House of Representatives. What the Constitution requires is that there be at least a majority of theentire membership. Under Section 18, the Commission shall rule by majority vote of all the members and in Section 19, theCommission shall meet only while congress is in session, at the call of its Chairman or a majority of all its members "to

    discharge such powers and functions herein conferred upon it". Implementing the above provisions of the Constitution, Section

    10 Chapter 3 of the Rules of the Commission on Appointments, provides as follows:Sec. 10. Place of Meeting and Quorum: The Commission shall meet at either the session hall of the Senate or theHouse of Representatives upon call of the Chairman or as the Commission may designate. The presence of at leastthirteen (13) members is necessary to constitute a quorum. Provided, however, that at least four (4) of the membersconstituting the quorum should come from either house. . . .

    It is quite evident that the Constitution does not require the election and presence of twelve (12) senators and twelve (12) members of theHouse of Representatives in order that the Commission may function. Other instances may be mentioned of Constitutional collegial

    bodies which perform their composition is expressly specified by the Constitution. Among these are the SupremeCourt, 13 Civil Service Commission, 14 Commission on Election, 15 Commission on Audit. 16 They perform their function so long andthere is the required quorum, usually a majority of its membership. The Commission on Appointments may perform its functions andtransact it s business even if only ten (10) senators are elected thereto as long as a quorum exists.

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    It may also be mentioned that while the Constitution provides for equal membership from the Senate and the House of Representatives in

    the Commission on Appointments, the senators on the one hand, and the representatives, on the other, do not vote separately but jointly,and usually along party lines. Even if Senator Taada would not be able sit in the Commission on Appointments, the LP-LDP-LABANwould still be represented in the Commission by congressman Ponce Enrile who has become a member of the LP. On the other hand,there is nothing to stop any of the political party in order to fill up the two vacancies resulting from this decision.

    Assuming that the Constitution intended that there be always twelve (12) senators in the Commission on Appointments, the instantsituation cannot be rectified by the Senate in disregard of the rule on proportional representation. The election of senator Romulo and

    Senator Taada as members of the Commission on Appointments by the LDP majority in the Senate was clearly a violation of Section 18

    of Article VI of the 1987 Constitution. Their nomination and election by the LDP majority by sheer force of superiority in numbers duringthe Senate organization meeting of August 27, 1992 was done in grave abuse of discretion. Where power is exercised in a mannerinconsistent with the command of the Constitution, and by reason of numerical strength, knowingly and not merely inadvertently, said

    exercise amounts to abuse of authority granted by law and grave abuse of discretion is properly found to exist.

    In the light of the foregoing and on the basis of the applicable rules and jurisprudence on the matter before this Court, We declare theelection of Senator Alberto Romulo and Senator Wigberto Taada as members of the Commission on Appointments as null and void for

    being in violation of the rule on proportional representation under Section 18 of Article VI of the 1987 Constitution of the Philippines.

    Accordingly, a writ of prohibition is hereby issued ordering the said respondents Senator Romulo and Senator Taada to desist fromassuming, occupying and discharging the functions of members of the Commission on Appointments; and ordering the respondents

    Senate President Neptali Gonzales, in his capacity as ex-officio Chairman of the Commission on Appointments, to desist fromrecognizing the membership of the respondent Senators and from allowing and permitting them from sitting and participating as members

    of said Commission.

    SO ORDERED.

    Narvasa C.J., Gutierrez, Jr., Cruz, Feliciano, Padilla, Bidin, Grio-Aquino, Regalado, Davide, Romero, Nocon and Bellosillo, JJ.,concur.

    Medialdea, J., is on leave,

    Footnotes

    1 Includes Senator Teofisto T. Guingona, Jr.

    2 Senator Alberto Romulo.

    3 T.S.N., Session of August 27, 1992, p. 29 as Annex to Petitions

    4 Section 18, Article VI of the Constitution.

    5 Seepage 2 of the Decision.

    6 Coseteng vs. Mitra, Jr., 187 SCRA 377 (1990).

    7 Daza vs. Sinson, 180 SCRA 496 (1989).

    8 Osmea vs. Commission on Elections, 199 SCRA 750 ( 1991).

    9 Section 2, Rule 65 of the Rules of Court.

    10 Section 3, Rule 65 of the Rules of Court.

    11 Taada vs. Cuenco, 103 Phil. 1051 (1957).

    12 Supra, note 6.

    13 Section 4, Article VIII.

    14 Section 1 (1), Article IX-A.

    15 Section 1 (1), Article IX-C.

    15 Section 1 (1), Article IX-D.

    Republic of the Philippines

    SUPREME COURTManila

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    EN BANC

    G.R. No. 106971 March 1, 1993

    TEOFISTO T. GUINGONA, JR. and LAKAS-NATIONAL UNION OF CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATS (LAKAS-NUCD),petitioners,vs.

    NEPTALI A. GONZALES, ALBERTO ROMULO and WIGBERTO E. TAADA, respondents.

    NATIONALIST PEOPLE'S COALITION, petitioner-in-intervention.

    Ricardo G. Nepomuceno for petitioners.

    Gonzales, Batiller, Bilog & Associates for respondents.

    R E S O L U T I O N

    CAMPOS, JR., J.:

    In motions separately filed by respondent Senator Wigberto E. Taada on October 27, 1992 and respondents Senate

    President Neptali A. Gonzales and Senator Alberto Romulo on October 30, 1992, said respondents moved for a

    reconsideration of our decision dated October 20, 1992, on the following grounds:

    Senator Taada alleges that:

    1) The decision was premised on an erroneous appreciation of relevant factual precedents;

    2) The decision ignored the reality of the multi-party system recognized both by the letter and spirit of the 1935 and

    1987 Constitutions;

    3) It is mandatory to fill up twelve (12) seats in the Commission on Appointments;

    4) The Senate did not act with grave abuse of discretion when it elected respondent Taada to the Commission on

    Appointments.

    In their Motion for Reconsideration/Clarification, Senators Gonzales and Romulo allege:

    1) That the decision is inconsistent with the Supreme Court's ruling in the two cases ofCoseteng vs. Mitra,Jr.1andDaza vs. Singson.2

    2) It is mandatory to have twelve (12) members of the Commission of Appointments to enable it to function as a

    constitutional body.

    3) The Tolentino Compromise Formula was adopted by the Senate and accepted by all political parties and must

    govern the selection of respondent Senators to the Commission on Appointments.

    4) The election of the respondents Senators is in compliance with the multi-party system which contemplates a

    realignment of political parties to remove fractional membership of any party in the Commission.

    On December 16, 1992, the petitioner-in intervention Nationalist People's Coalition (NPC) filed its separate

    Comments to the Motions of respondents Senators while the petitioners filed on January 7, 1993 their separate

    Comments on the Motion of the respondents.

    Considering the grounds set forth in the Motions of the respondents and in the light of the reasons/arguments

    submitted in refutation thereof, We deny both Motions for Reconsideration on the following grounds:

    1) The decision is based on a simple interpretation and application of Article VI, Section 18 of the 1987 Constitution

    and We quote pertinent portions thereof.

    It is an established fact to which all the parties agree that the mathematical representation of each of

    the political parties represented in the Senate is as follows:

    LDP 7.5

    LP-PDP-LABAN .5

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    NPC 2.5

    LAKAS-NUCD 1.5

    It is also a fact accepted by all such parties that each of them is entitled to a fractional membership on

    the basis of the rule on proportional representation of each of the political parties. A literal

    interpretation of Section 18 of Article VI of the Constitution leads to no other manner of application

    than as above. The problem is what to do with the fraction of .5 or 1/2 to which each of the parties is

    entitled. The LDP majority in the Senate converted a fractional half membership into a whole

    membership of one senator by adding one half or .5 to 7.5 to be able to elect Senator Romulo. In sodoing one other party's fractional membership was correspondingly reduced leaving the latter's

    representation in the Commission on Appointments to less than their proportional representation in

    the Senate. This is a clearly a violation of Section 18 because it is no longer in compliance with its

    mandate that membership in the Commission be based on the proportional representation of the

    political parties. The election of Senator Romulo gave more representation to the LDP and reduced

    the representation of one political party either the LAKAS-NUCD or the NPC.

    xxx xxx xxx

    We find the respondent's claim to membership in the Commission on Appointments by nomination

    and election of the LDP majority in the Senate as not in accordance with Section 18 of Article VI of

    the 1987 Constitution and therefore violative of the same because it is not in compliance with the

    requirement that twelve senators shall be elected on the basis of proportional representation of the

    political parties represented therein. To disturb the resulting fractional membership of the political

    parties in the Commission on Appointments by adding together two halves to make a whole is a

    breach of the rule on proportional representation because it will give the LDP an added member in

    the Commission by utilizing the fractional membership of the minority political party, who is

    deprived of half a representation.

    The provision of Section 18 on proportional representation is mandatory in character and does not leave

    any discretion to the majority party in the Senate to disobey or disregard the rule on proportional

    representation; otherwise, the party with a majority representation in the Senate or the House ofRepresentatives can by sheer force of numbers impose its will on the hapless minority. By requiring a

    proportional representation in the Commission on Appointments, Section 18 in effect works as a check on

    the majority party in the Senate and helps to maintain the balance of power. No party can claim more than

    what is entitled to under such rule. To allow it to elect more than its proportional share of members is to

    confer upon such a party a greater share in the membership in the Commission on Appointments and morepower to impose its will on the minority, who by the same token, suffers a diminution of its rightful

    membership in the Commission.3

    The membership of the late Senator Lorenzo Taada in the Commission on Appointments for the year alluded to by

    respondents is not disputed. The questioned decision however refers to the former Senator's Membership in the

    Commission during his first election as Senator in 1953-1954.4 In the following years the composition of theCommission on Appointments showed varying membership from the Nacionalista Party and Liberal Party, not

    discounting the various coalitions of the rival groups within their own ranks. During this period, his membership in

    the Commission was acquiesced to by the other members of the Senate, including the Nationalista Party which had a

    fractional vote. His membership in the Commission was never contested nor disputed by any party nor member of the

    Senate so that the question of whether his sitting as member of the Commission was constitutionality valid or not

    never reached the Court. The older Taada's membership in the Commission on Appointments cannot thus be

    considered by respondent Senator Taada as a precedent sufficient to overrule the clear mandate of Article VI, Section18 of the Constitution.

    It is a matter of record that in the political ventures of the late Senator Lorenzo Taada, he had his Citizens Party

    coalesce with the Nationalista Party and got himself elected as Senator under the banner of the latter party. His

    election to the Commission was principally due to the alliance of his Citizens Party with the Nationalista Party and not

    because he was elected thereto on the strength of his being the lone representative of the Citizens' Party.5SenatorTaada was included in the Nationalista Party ticket in 1953 until he parted ways temporarily with the same before the

    end of 1955. In 1959 he ran as a guest candidate of the Nationalista Party for a term of 6 years and again got

    re-elected in 1965 for another 6-year term under the Nationalista Party. The Nationalista-Citizens Party coalition of 12

    Senators in the Senate from

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    1965-1967 gave the coalition 6 members in the Commission on Appointments, including the late Senator Lorenzo

    Taada. As early as those years, the Senate recognized the rule on proportional representation in the Commission by

    resorting to a coalition of political parties in order to resolve and avoid fractional membership in the Commission.

    This practice was repeated in

    1968-1970 where the lone elected Senator of the Citizens Party was nominated and elected to the Commission on

    Appointments as the Senator to complete a whole number in the proportional representation to the Commission, with

    the late Senator Taada becoming the 16th Senator of the Coalition, enabling it to put 8 members in the Commission.

    Likewise, in 1970, the late Senator Taada filled up the 18th membership of the Coalition to become the 9th memberrepresenting the Coalition in the Commission.

    The election of the late Senator Lorenzo Taada to the Commission on Appointments does not reflect any practice or

    tradition in the Senate which can be considered as a precedent in the interpretation of the constitutional provision on

    proportional representation in the Commission on Appointments. No practice or tradition, established by a mere

    tolerance, can, without judicial acquiescence, ripen into a doctrine of practical construction of the fundamental law. In

    the absence of judicial confirmation of the constitutionality of the challenged legislative practice the repeated

    erroneous legislative interpretation of a constitutional provision, does not vest power on the legislature.6

    2) We take note of an erroneous reference in our decision to the listing of the party affiliation of the Senators based on

    the result of the election on May 11, 1992, giving the LDP only 15 members and including Senator Teofisto Guingona

    as a member of the Lakas-NUCDP. Respondents, however, accepted the fact that for purposes of determining the

    proportional representatives of each political party to the Commission on Appointments, the basis thereof is the actual

    number of members of each political party at the time of election of the members of the Commission on Appointmentsin the Senate.7 In fact, respondents affirmed that the affiliation of Senator Guingona with the Lakas-NUCDP upheldthe doctrine enunciated inDaza vs. Singson,8 recognizing changes in alignments of membership in the Commissionbased on changing political alignments at the time of the organization of the Commission on Appointments. The issue

    therefore has no significance as an argument to set aside our decision.

    3) Senator Taada was actually nominated by the LP because the house rules require that the party must make the

    nomination. In fact he nominated himself as representative of the LP-LDP-LABAN. It was the Majority Leader, an

    LDP Senator, (Senator Romulo) who presented the motion to elect respondent Senator Taada (along with the

    Senators belonging to the other Minority parties NPC and LAKAS-NUCD) as part of his function or duty to

    present for election and votation those previously nominated by the various political parties. In nominating the twelve

    (12) Senators to the membership in the Commission on Appointments, Senator Romulo moved:

    Mr. President, pursuant to the Motion just approved, I have the honor to submit for election to the

    Commission on Appointments the 12 Senators to compose its membership : Senators Angara, Herrera,Alvarez, Aquino, Mercado, Ople, Sotto and Romulofor the LDP; Senators Tolentino and Osmeafor

    NPC; Senator Rasul, for Lakas-NUCD; and Senator Taada for LP-PDP, Mr. President. 9

    4) This Court has ruled that, under Article VI, Section 18 of the Constitution providing for a multi-party system,

    entitlement to proportional representation in the Commission on Appointments requires a minimum membership in

    each house. 10 The statement of this Court inDaza vs. Singson11 to the effect that "under the Constitutional provisionon membership of the Commission on Appointments, the members thereof are NOT limited to the majority and

    minority parties therein but extends to all the political parties represented in each house of Congress", does not and

    should not be construed to mean that all political parties, irrespective of numerical representation in the Senate, are

    entitled by Constitutional fiat to at least one representation in the Commission. The Supreme Court in the subsequent

    case ofCoseteng vs. Mitra, Jr. 12 made this clear where it ruled that proportional representation in the Commission onAppointments requires a minimum membership of a party in each house. The mere presence of one Senator belonging

    to a political party does not ipso facto entitle such a party to membership in the Commission on Appointments.

    5) We have declared that the Constitution does not require that the full complement of 12 Senators be elected to the

    membership in the Commission on Appointments before it can discharge its functions and that it is not mandatory to

    elect 12 Senators to the Commission. The overriding directive of Article VI, Section 18 is that there must be a

    proportional representation of the political parties in the membership of the Commission on Appointments and that the

    specification of 12 members to constitute its membership is merely an indication of the maximum complement

    allowable under the Constitution. The act of filling up the membership thereof cannot disregard the mandate of

    proportional representation of the parties even if it results in fractional membership in unusual situations like the case

    at bar.

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    Section 18 provides, in part, as follows:

    Thereshallbe a Commission on Appointments consisting of the President of the Senate as ex-

    officioChairman, twelve Senators, and . . . , elected by each house on the basis of proportional

    representation . . . .

    The respondent's contention that the use of the word "shall" in Section 18 indicating the composition of the

    Commission on Appointments makes the election of the Senators mandatory, omitting that part of Section 18 which

    provides that (they shall be) elected by each house on the basis of proportional representation. This interpretation findssupport in the case ofTaada vs. Cuenco, 13 where this Court held that the constitutional provision makes mandatory

    the election of the specified number of Senators to the Commission on Appointments but also ruled that they should

    be elected on the basis of proportional representation of the political parties. In case of conflict in interpretation, the

    latter mandate requiring proportional representation must prevail. Such interpretation is the only correct and rational

    interpretation which the court can adopt in consonance with its solemn duty to uphold the Constitution and give effect

    the meaning intended by its framers to every clause and word thereof.

    The Constitution does not require the election and presence of twelve Senators and twelve Representatives in order

    that the Commission may function. Article VI, Section 18 which deals with the Commission on Appointments,

    provides that "the Commission shall rule by majority vote of all the members", and in Section 19 of the same Article,

    it is provided that the Commission "shall meet only while Congress is in session, at the call of its Chairman or a

    majority of all its Members, to discharge such powers and functions as are herein conferred upon it". In implementing

    these provisions, the Rules of the Commission on Appointments provide that the presence of at least thirteen (13)

    members is necessary to constitute a quorum, "Provided however, that at least four (4) of the members constituting the

    quorum should come from either house". 14 Even if the composition of the Commission is fixed by the Constitution, itcan perform its functions even if not fully constituted, so long as it has the required quorum, which is less than the full

    complement fixed by the Constitution. And the Commission can validly perform its functions and transact its business

    even if only ten (10) Senators are elected thereto. Even if respondent Senator Taada is excluded from the

    Commission on Appointments for violation of the rule on proportional representation, the party he represents still has

    representation in the Commission in the presence of house members from the LP-LDP-LABAN such as Congressman

    Juan Ponce Enrile.

    Respondents ask for a clarification of our statement which suggested a practical solution to break the impasse in the

    membership of the Senate in the Commission on Appointments, which we quote:

    . . . On the other hand, there is nothing to stop any of the political parties from forming a coalition with

    another political party in order to fill up the two vacancies resulting from this decision. 15The statement is merely a suggestion but not an exclusive solution. It is not part of the disposition of the case. It does

    not contemplate a realignment of political parties, as otherwise this Court would have explicitly said so. What we

    intimated is merely this: That those entitled to fractional memberships may join their half-memberships to form a full

    membership and together nominate one from their coalition to the Commission on Appointments. For example, the

    NPC and the LAKAS-NUCD may join their half-memberships and jointly nominate one of their own Senators to the

    Commission. In the same way the LDP and the LP-PDP-LABAN may nominate Senator Wigberto Taada to fill up

    the other slot to complete the membership to twelve. But the latter, as a coalition, may not insist in electing both

    Senator Taada and Senator Romulo to fill up two slots because this is certainly a violation of the rule on proportional

    representation.

    Who decides the question of proportionality? The power to choose who among them will sit as members of the

    Commission on Appointments belongs to the Senate. The number of senators is fixed by the Constitution to twelve,

    but the numbers of senators to be chosen must comply with the rule on proportional representation. The question ofwho interprets what is meant by proportional representation has been a settled rule that it belongs to this Court.

    The acceptance by the Senate of Senator Tolentino's formula to settle temporarily the impasse concerning the

    membership in the Commission on Appointments by leaving the final decision to the Supreme Court is a Senate

    recognition that the determination of proportional representation under Article VI, Section 18 of the Constitution is a

    function of this Court.

    Once a controversy as to the application or interpretation of a constitutional provision is raised before this Court, it

    becomes a legal issue which the Court is bound by Constitutional mandate to decide. The framers of our Constitution,

    in borrowing from constitutions of other states, thought it wise to vest in the Supreme Court the role in final arbiter in

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    cases of conflicts in the interpretation of the fundamental law. In this role, the Court serves as a check on the unbridled

    use of power by the legislative majority to silence the minority. Democracy may breed but it will not sanction tyranny

    by force of numbers.

    The election of respondents Senators Taada and Romulo is a clear disregard of the constitutional provision and when

    done over the objections of their colleagues in the Senate, constitutes a grave abuse of discretion. We quote from our

    decision:

    . . . The election of Senator Romulo and Senator Taada as members of the Commission on Appointmentsby the LDP Majority in the Senate was clearly a violation of Section 18 Article VI of the 1987

    Constitution. Their nomination and election by the LDP Majority by sheer force of superiority in numbers

    during the Senate organization meeting of August 27, 1992 was done in grave abuse of discretion. Where

    power is exercised in a manner inconsistent with the command of the Constitution, and by reason of

    numerical strength, knowingly and not merely inadvertently, said exercise amounts to abuse of authority

    granted by law and grave abuse of discretion is properly found to exist. 16

    For lack of merit, the Motions for Reconsideration are DENIED with FINALITY.

    SO ORDERED.

    Narvasa, C.J., Cruz, Feliciano, Padilla, Bidin, Grio-Aquino, Regalado, Davide, Jr., Romero, Nocon, Bellosillo, Melo

    and Quiason, JJ., concur.

    Gutierrez, Jr., J., is on leave.

    # Footnotes

    1 187 SCRA 377 (1990).

    2 180 SCRA 496 (1989).

    3 Decision, pp. 6-10;Rollo, pp. 270-274.

    4 See Taada vs. Cuenco, 103 Phil. 1051 (1957).

    5Ibid.

    6 See Board of Trustees of Lawrence University vs. Outagame County, 136 N.W. 619 (1912); Amos

    vs. Moseley, 77 So. 619 (1917), 11 AM JUR 700.

    7 See Comment to Petition filed by respondents Senate President Neptali A. Gonzales, Senators

    Alberto Romulo and Wigberto E. Taada, p. 10;Rollo,

    p. 131.

    8 Supra, note 2.

    9 TSN, Session of August 27, 1992, Annex "E" of Petition, p. 29;Rollo, p. 111.

    10 Supra, note 1.

    11 Supra, note 7.

    12 Supra, note 1.

    13 Supra, note 4.

    14 RULES OF THE COMMISSION ON APPOINTMENTS, Chapter 3, Sec. 10.

    15 Decision, p. 12;Rollo, p. 276.

    16 Decision, pp. 12-13;Rollo, pp. 276-277.