Bar Subjects

Welcome to Law Discourse!

I know for a fact that the life of a law student is difficult, to say the least. I'd like to say... "We're all on the same boat!" This is the reason why I felt compelled to create this blog. It is precisely to help people like me have easy access to information, particularly case digests.

I would appreciate any comments, suggestions and contributions, which could help in making this site more useful. So, if you happen to visit this blog, kindly post a comment to help me improve this site.

Please take the time to read the cases in its full text. Just click on the links below to go to the Supreme Court archive or Lawphil archive.

Special thanks is accorded to Arellano Law Foundation for coming up with "The LawPhil Project" and Chan Robles with their "Virtual Law Library" for generously sharing it to everyone. Kudos to all the people who made this possible!

08 October 2010

THE PROVINCE OF NORTH COTABATO vs. THE GOVERNMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES GR# 183591, October 14, 2008

Carpio-Morales, J:
Facts:
The Memorandum of Agreement on the Ancestral Domain Aspect of the GRP-MILF Tripoli Agreement of Peace of 2001 (MOA) is assailed on its constitutionality. This document prepared by the joint efforts of the Government of the Republic of the Philippines (GRP) Peace Panel and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) Peace Panel, was merely a codification of consensus points reached between both parties and the aspirations of the MILF to have a Bangsamoro homeland.

Issue:
When the Executive Department pronounced to abandon the MOA, is the issue of its constitutionality merely moot and academic and therefore no longer justiciable by the Court?

Held:
Yes. Since the MOA has not been signed, its provisions will not at all come into effect. The MOA will forever remain a draft that has never been finalized. It is now nothing more than a piece of paper, with no legal force or binding effect. It cannot be the source of, nor be capable of violating, any right. The instant Petitions, therefore, and all other oppositions to the MOA, have no more leg to stand on. They no longer present an actual case or a justiciable controversy for resolution by this Court.

An actual case or controversy exists when there is a conflict of legal rights or an assertion of opposite legal claims, which can be resolved on the basis of existing law and jurisprudence. A justiciable controversy is distinguished from a hypothetical or abstract difference or dispute, in that the former involves a definite and concrete dispute touching on the legal relations of parties having adverse legal interests. A justiciable controversy admits of specific relief through a decree that is conclusive in character, whereas an opinion only advises what the law would be upon a hypothetical state of facts.

The Court should not feel constrained to rule on the Petitions at bar just because of the great public interest these cases have generated. We are, after all, a court of law, and not of public opinion. The power of judicial review of this Court is for settling real and existent dispute, it is not for allaying fears or addressing public clamor. In acting on supposed abuses by other branches of government, the Court must be careful that it is not committing abuse itself by ignoring the fundamental principles of constitutional law.

No comments:

Post a Comment