EN BANC
G.R. No. 204819, April 08, 2014
JAMES M. IMBONG AND LOVELY–ANN C. IMBONG, FOR THEMSELVES AND IN BEHALF OF THEIR MINOR CHILDREN, LUCIA CARLOS IMBONG AND BERNADETTE CARLOS IMBONG AND MAGNIFICAT CHILD DEVELOPMENT CENTER, INC., Petitioners, v. HON. PAQUITO N. OCHOA, JR., EXECUTIVE SECRETARY, HON. FLORENCIO B. ABAD, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT, HON. ENRIQUE T. ONA, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, HON. ARMIN A. LUISTRO, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, CULTURE AND SPORTS AND HON. MANUEL A. ROXAS II, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT, Respondents.
G.R. NO. 204934
ALLIANCE FOR THE FAMILY FOUNDATION PHILIPPINES, INC. [ALFI], REPRESENTED BY ITS PRESIDENT, MARIA CONCEPCION S. NOCHE, SPOUSES REYNALDO S. LUISTRO & ROSIE B. LUISTRO, JOSE S. SANDEJAS & ELENITA S.A. SANDEJAS, ARTURO M. GORREZ & MARIETTA C. GORREZ, SALVADOR S. MANTE, JR. & HAZELEEN L. MANTE, ROLANDO M. BAUTISTA & MARIA FELISA S. BAUTISTA, DESIDERIO RACHO & TRAQUILINA RACHO, FERNAND ANTONIO A. TANSINGCO & CAROL ANNE C. TANSINGCO FOR THEMSELVES AND ON BEHALF OF THEIR MINOR CHILDREN, THERESE ANTONETTE C. TANSINGCO, LORENZO JOSE C. TANSINGCO, MIGUEL FERNANDO C. TANGSINGCO, CARLO JOSEMARIA C. TANSINGCO & JUAN PAOLO C. TANSINGCO, SPOUSES MARIANO V. ARANETA & EILEEN Z. ARANETA FOR THEMSELVES AND ON BEHALF OF THEIR MINOR CHILDREN, RAMON CARLOS Z. ARANETA & MAYA ANGELICA Z. ARANETA, SPOUSES RENATO C. CASTOR & MILDRED C. CASTOR FOR THEMSELVES AND ON BEHALF OF THEIR MINOR CHILDREN, RENZ JEFFREY C. CASTOR, JOSEPH RAMIL C. CASTOR, JOHN PAUL C. CASTOR & RAPHAEL C. CASTOR, SPOUSES ALEXANDER R. RACHO & ZARA Z. RACHO FOR THEMSELVES AND ON BEHALF OF THEIR MINOR CHILDREN MARGARITA RACHO, MIKAELA RACHO, MARTIN RACHO, MARI RACHO & MANOLO RACHO, SPOUSES ALFRED R. RACHO & FRANCINE V. RACHO FOR THEMSELVES AND ON BEHALF OF THEIR MINOR CHILDREN MICHAEL RACHO, MARIANA RACHO, RAFAEL RACHO, MAXI RACHO, CHESSIE RACHO & LAURA RACHO, SPOUSES DAVID R. RACHO & ARMILYN A. RACHO FOR THEMSELVES AND ON BEHALF OF THEIR MINOR CHILD GABRIEL RACHO, MINDY M. JUATAS AND ON BEHALF OF HER MINOR CHILDREN ELIJAH GERALD JUATAS AND ELIAN GABRIEL JUATAS, SALVACION M. MONTEIRO, EMILY R. LAWS, JOSEPH R. LAWS & KATRINA R. LAWS, Petitioners, v. HON. PAQUITO N. OCHOA, JR., EXECUTIVE SECRETARY, HON. ENRIQUE T. ONA, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, HON. ARMIN A. LUISTRO, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, CULTURE AND SPORTS, HON. CORAZON SOLIMAN, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL WELFARE AND DEVELOPMENT, HON. MANUEL A. ROXAS II, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT, HON. FLORENCIO B. ABAD, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT, HON. ARSENIO M. BALISACAN, SOCIO–ECONOMIC PLANNING SECRETARY AND NEDA DIRECTOR–GENERAL, THE PHILIPPINE COMMISSION ON WOMEN, REPRESENTED BY ITS CHAIRPERSON, REMEDIOS IGNACIO–RIKKEN, THE PHILIPPINE HEALTH INSURANCE CORPORATION, REPRESENTED BY ITS PRESIDENT EDUARDO BANZON, THE LEAGUE OF PROVINCES OF THE PHILIPPINES, REPRESENTED BY ITS PRESIDENT ALFONSO UMALI, THE LEAGUE OF CITIES OF THE PHILIPPINES, REPRESENTED BY ITS PRESIDENT OSCAR RODRIGUEZ, AND THE LEAGUE OF MUNICIPALITIES OF THE PHILIPPINES, REPRESENTED BY ITS PRESIDENT DONATO MARCOS, Respondents.
G.R. NO. 204957
TASK FORCE FOR FAMILY AND LIFE VISAYAS, INC. AND VALERIANO S. AVILA, Petitioners, v. HON. PAQUITO N. OCHOA, JR., EXECUTIVE SECRETARY; HON. FLORENCIO B. ABAD, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT; HON. ENRIQUE T. ONA, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION; AND HON. MANUEL A. ROXAS II, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT, Respondents.
G.R. NO. 204988
SERVE LIFE CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY, INC., REPRESENTED BY DR. NESTOR B. LUMICAO, M.D., AS PRESIDENT AND IN HIS PERSONAL CAPACITY, ROSEVALE FOUNDATION INC., REPRESENTED BY DR. RODRIGO M. ALENTON, M.D., AS MEMBER OF THE SCHOOL BOARD AND IN HIS PERSONAL CAPACITY, ROSEMARIE R. ALENTON, IMELDA G. IBARRA, CPA, LOVENIA P. NACES, PHD., ANTHONY G. NAGAC, EARL ANTHONY C. GAMBE AND MARLON I. YAP, Petitioners, v. OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT, SENATE OF THE PHILIPPINES, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, HON. PAQUITO N. OCHOA, JR., EXECUTIVE SECRETARY, HON. FLORENCIO B. ABAD, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT; HON. ENRIQUE T. ONA, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH; HON. ARMIN A. LUISTRO, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION AND HON. MANUEL A. ROXAS II, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT, Respondents.
G.R. NO. 205003
EXPEDITO A. BUGARIN, JR., Petitioner, v. OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES, HON. SENATE PRESIDENT, HON. SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES AND HON. SOLICITOR GENERAL, Respondents.
G.R. NO. 205043
EDUARDO B. OLAGUER AND THE CATHOLIC XYBRSPACE APOSTOLATE OF THE PHILIPPINES, Petitioners, v. DOH SECRETARY ENRIQUE T. ONA, FDA DIRECTOR SUZETTE H. LAZO, DBM SECRETARY FLORENCIO B. ABAD, DILG SECRETARY MANUEL A. ROXAS II, DECS SECRETARY ARMIN A. LUISTRO, Respondents.
G.R. NO. 205138
PHILIPPINE ALLIANCE OF XSEMINARIANS, INC. (PAX), HEREIN REPRESENTED BY ITS NATIONAL PRESIDENT, ATTY. RICARDO M. RIBO, AND IN HIS OWN BEHALF, ATTY. LINO E.A. DUMAS, ROMEO B. ALMONTE, OSMUNDO C. ORLANES, ARSENIO Z. MENOR, SAMUEL J. YAP, JAIME F. MATEO, ROLLY SIGUAN, DANTE E. MAGDANGAL, MICHAEL EUGENIO O. PLANA, BIENVENIDO C. MIGUEL, JR., LANDRITO M. DIOKNO AND BALDOMERO FALCONE, Petitioners, v. HON. PAQUITO N. OCHOA, JR., EXECUTIVE SECRETARY, HON. FLORENCIO B. ABAD, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT, HON. ENRIQUE T. ONA, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, HON. ARMIN A. LUISTRO, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, HON. MANUEL A. ROXAS II, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT, HON. CORAZON J. SOLIMAN, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL WELFARE AND DEVELOPMENT, HON. ARSENIO BALISACAN, DIRECTOR–GENERAL, NATIONAL ECONOMIC AND DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY, HON. SUZETTE H. LAZO, DIRECTOR–GENERAL, FOOD AND DRUGS ADMINISTRATION, THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS, PHILIPPINE HEALTH INSURANCE CORPORATION, AND THE BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS, PHILIPPINE COMMISSION ON WOMEN, Respondents.
G.R. NO. 205478
REYNALDO J. ECHAVEZ, M.D., JACQUELINE H. KING, M.D., CYNTHIA T. DOMINGO, M.D., AND JOSEPHINE MILLADO–LUMITAO, M.D., COLLECTIVELY KNOWN AS DOCTORS FOR LIFE, AND ANTHONY PEREZ, MICHAEL ANTHONY G. MAPA, CARLOS ANTONIO PALAD, WILFREDO JOSE, CLAIRE NAVARRO, ANNA COSIO, AND GABRIEL DY LIACCO COLLECTIVELY KNOWN AS FILIPINOS FOR LIFE, Petitioners, v. HON. PAQUITO N. OCHOA, JR., EXECUTIVE SECRETARY; HON. FLORENCIO B. ABAD, SECRETARY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT; HON. ENRIQUE T. ONA, SECRETARY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH; HON. ARMIN A. LUISTRO, SECRETARY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION; AND HON. MANUEL A. ROXAS II, SECRETARY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT, Respondents.
G.R. NO. 205491
SPOUSES FRANCISCO S. TATAD AND MARIA FENNY C. TATAD & ALA F. PAGUIA, FOR THEMSELVES, THEIR POSTERITY, AND THE REST OF FILIPINO POSTERITY, Petitioners, v. OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES, Respondent.
[G.R. NO. 205720] PRO–LIFE PHILIPPINES FOUNDATION, INC., REPRESENTED BY LORNA MELEGRITO, AS EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, AND IN HER PERSONAL CAPACITY, JOSELYN B. BASILIO, ROBERT Z. CORTES, ARIEL A. CRISOSTOMO, JEREMY I. GATDULA, CRISTINA A. MONTES, RAUL ANTONIO A. NIDOY, WINSTON CONRAD B. PADOJINOG, RUFINO L. POLICARPIO III, Petitioners, v. OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT, SENATE OF THE PHILIPPINES, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, HON. PAQUITO N. OCHOA, JR., EXECUTIVE SECRETARY, HON. FLORENCIO B. ABAD, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT, HON. ENRIQUE T. ONA, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, HON. ARMIN A. LUISTRO, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION AND HON. MANUEL A. ROXAS II, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT, Respondents.
G.R. NO. 206355
MILLENNIUM SAINT FOUNDATION, INC., ATTY. RAMON PEDROSA, ATTY. CITA BORROMEO–GARCIA, STELLA ACEDERA, ATTY. BERTENI CATALUÑA CAUSING, Petitioners, v. OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT, OFFICE OF THE EXECUTIVE SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, Respondents.
G.R. NO. 207111
JOHN WALTER B. JUAT, MARY M. IMBONG, ANTHONY VICTORIO B. LUMICAO, JOSEPH MARTIN Q. VERDEJO, ANTONIA EMMA R. ROXAS AND LOTA LAT–GUERRERO, PETITIONERS VS. HON. PAQUITO N. OCHOA, JR., EXECUTIVE SECRETARY, HON. FLORENCIO ABAD, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT, HON. ENRIQUE T. ONA, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, HON. ARMIN A. LUISTRO, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, CULTURE AND SPORTS AND HON. MANUEL A. ROXAS II, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT, Respondents.
G.R. NO. 207172
COUPLES FOR CHRIST FOUNDATION, INC., SPOUSES JUAN CARLOS ARTADI SARMIENTO AND FRANCESCA ISABELLE BESINGA–SARMIENTO, AND SPOUSES LUIS FRANCIS A. RODRIGO, JR. AND DEBORAH MARIE VERONICA N. RODRIGO., Petitioners, v. HON. PAQUITO N. OCHOA, JR., EXECUTIVE SECRETARY, HON. FLORENCIO B. ABAD, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT, HON. ENRIQUE T. ONA, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, HON. ARMIN A. LUISTRO, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, CULTURE AND SPORTS AND HON. MANUEL A. ROXAS II, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT, Respondents.
G.R. NO. 207563
ALMARIM CENTI TILLAH AND ABDULHUSSEIN M. KASHIM, Petitioners, v. HON. PAQUITO N. OCHOA, JR., EXECUTIVE SECRETARY, HON. ENRIQUE T. ONA, SECRETARY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, AND HON. ARMIN A. LUISTRO,SECRETARY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT, Respondents.
LEONEN, J.:
Section 1. The judicial power shall be vested in one Supreme Court and in such lower courts as may be established by law.
Judicial power includes the duty of the courts of justice to settle actual controversies involving rights which are legally demandable and enforceable, and to determine whether or not there has been a grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess jurisdiction on the part of any branch or instrumentality of the Government. (Emphasis supplied)
The power of judicial review is limited to actual cases or controversies. Courts decline to issue advisory opinions or to resolve hypothetical or feigned problems, or mere academic questions. The limitation of the power of judicial review to actual cases and controversies defines the role assigned to the judiciary in a tripartite allocation of power, to assure that the courts will not intrude into areas committed to the other branches of government.34
x x x Citing precedents, the Court ruled that the fact of the law or act in question being not yet effective does not negate ripeness. Concrete acts under a law are not necessary to render the controversy ripe. Even a singular violation of the Constitution and/or law is enough to awaken judicial duty.
In this case, the Court is of the view that an actual case or controversy exists and that the same is ripe for judicial determination. Considering that the RH Law and its implementing rules have already taken effect, and that the budgetary measures to carry out the law have already been passed, it is evident that the subject petitions present a justiciable controversy. As stated earlier, when an action of the legislative branch is seriously alleged to have infringed the Constitution, it not only becomes a right, but also a duty of the Judiciary to settle the dispute.36 (Emphasis in the original)
Stripped to its core, what petitioner Garcia raises as an issue is the propriety of immediately and fully deregulating the oil industry. Such determination essentially dwells on the soundness or wisdom of the timing and manner of the deregulation Congress wants to implement through R.A. No. 8497. Quite clearly, the issue is not for us to resolve; we cannot rule on when and to what extent deregulation should take place without passing upon the wisdom of the policy of deregulation that Congress has decided upon. To use the words of Baker v. Carr, the ruling that petitioner Garcia asks requires “an initial policy determination of a kind clearly for non–judicial discretion”; the branch of government that was given by the people the full discretionary authority to formulate the policy is the legislative department.
x x x x
Petitioner Garcia’s thesis readily reveals the political, hence, non–justiciable, nature of his petition; the choice of undertaking full or partial deregulation is not for this Court to make.41
As early as Angara v. Electoral Commission, the Court ruled that the power of judicial review is limited to actual cases or controversies to be exercised after full opportunity of argument by the parties. Any attempt at abstraction could only lead to dialectics and barren legal questions and to sterile conclusions unrelated to actualities.
An actual case or controversy means an existing case or controversy that is appropriate or ripe for determination, not conjectural or anticipatory, lest the decision of the court would amount to an advisory opinion.
Information Technology Foundation of the Philippines v. COMELEC cannot be more emphatic:
“[C]ourts do not sit to adjudicate mere academic questions to satisfy scholarly interest, however intellectually challenging. The controversy must be justiciable—definite and concrete, touching on the legal relations of parties having adverse legal interests. In other words, the pleadings must show an active antagonistic assertion of a legal right, on the one hand, and a denial thereof on the other hand; that is, it must concern a real and not merely a theoretical question or issue. There ought to be an actual and substantial controversy admitting of specific relief through a decree conclusive in nature, as distinguished from an opinion advising what the law would be upon a hypothetical state of facts.”
Thus, a petition to declare unconstitutional a law converting the Municipality of Makati into a Highly Urbanized City was held to be premature as it was tacked on uncertain, contingent events. Similarly, a petition that fails to allege that an application for a license to operate a radio or television station has been denied or granted by the authorities does not present a justiciable controversy, and merely wheedles the Court to rule on a hypothetical problem.
The Court dismissed the petition in Philippine Press Institute v. Commission on Elections for failure to cite any specific affirmative action of the Commission on Elections to implement the assailed resolution. It refused, in Abbas v. Commission on Elections, to rule on the religious freedom claim of the therein petitioners based merely on a perceived potential conflict between the provisions of the Muslim Code and those of the national law, there being no actual controversy between real litigants.
The list of cases denying claims resting on purely hypothetical or anticipatory grounds goes on ad infinitum.
The Court is not unaware that a reasonable certainty of the occurrence of a perceived threat to any constitutional interest suffices to provide a basis for mounting a constitutional challenge. This, however, is qualified by the requirement that there must be sufficient facts to enable the Court to intelligently adjudicate the issues.45 (Emphasis supplied)
x x x this Court can hardly see any actual case or controversy to warrant the exercise of its power of judicial review. Settled is the rule that for the courts to exercise the power of judicial review, the following must be extant: (1) there must be an actual case calling for the exercise of judicial power; (2) the question must be ripe for adjudication; and (3) the person challenging must have the “standing.” An actual case or controversy involves a conflict of legal rights, an assertion of opposite legal claims, susceptible of judicial resolution as distinguished from a mere hypothetical or abstract difference or dispute. There must be a contrariety of legal rights that can be interpreted and enforced on the basis of existing law and jurisprudence. Closely related thereto is that the question must be ripe for adjudication. A question is considered ripe for adjudication when the act being challenged has had a direct adverse effect on the individual challenging it.
x x x x
The requisites of actual case and ripeness are absent in the present case. To repeat, the AOM issued by Andal merely requested petitioner Corales to comment/reply thereto. Truly, the AOM already contained a recommendation to issue a Notice of Disallowance; however, no Notice of Disallowance was yet issued. More so, there was no evidence to show that Andal had already enforced against petitioner Corales the contents of the AOM. x x x. The action taken by the petitioners to assail the AOM was, indeed, premature and based entirely on surmises, conjectures and speculations that petitioner Corales would eventually be compelled to reimburse petitioner Dr. Angeles’ salaries, should the audit investigation confirm the irregularity of such disbursements.47
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.
x x x. The Court must accord a co–equal branch of the government nothing less than trust and the presumption of good faith.
x x x x
Upon the Executive Department falls the indisputably difficult responsibility of diffusing the highly volatile situation in Mindanao resulting from the continued clashes between the Philippine military and Muslim rebel groups. In negotiating for peace, the Executive Department should be given enough leeway and should not be prevented from offering solutions which may be beyond what the present Constitution allows, as long as such solutions are agreed upon subject to the amendment of the Constitution by completely legal means.49 (Emphasis supplied)
Over and above the foregoing considerations, however, is the matter of separation of powers which would likely be disturbed should the Court meander into alien territory of the executive and dictate how the final shape of the peace agreement with the MILF should look like. The system of separation of powers contemplates the division of the functions of government into its three (3) branches x x x. Consequent to the actual delineation of power, each branch of government is entitled to be left alone to discharge its duties as it sees fit. Being one such branch, the judiciary, as Justice Laurel asserted in Planas v. Gil, “will neither direct nor restrain executive [or legislative action].” Expressed in another perspective, the system of separated powers is designed to restrain one branch from inappropriate interference in the business, or intruding upon the central prerogatives, of another branch; it is a blend of courtesy and caution, “a self–executing safeguard against the encroachment or aggrandizement of one branch at the expense of the other.” x x x. The sheer absurdity of the situation where the hands of executive officials, in their quest for a lasting and honorable peace, are sought to be tied lest they agree to something irreconcilable with the Constitution, should not be lost on the Court.
Under our constitutional set up, there cannot be any serious dispute that the maintenance of the peace, insuring domestic tranquility and the suppression of violence are the domain and responsibility of the executive. Now then, if it be important to restrict the great departments of government to the exercise of their appointed powers, it follows, as a logical corollary, equally important, that one branch should be left completely independent of the others, independent not in the sense that the three shall not cooperate in the common end of carrying into effect the purposes of the constitution, but in the sense that the acts of each shall never be controlled by or subjected to the influence of either of the branches.50
x x x. Where policy is involved, we are bound by our constitutional duties to leave the question for determination by those duly designated by the Constitution—the Executive, Congress, or the people in their sovereign capacity.
In the present case, the peace and order problems of Mindanao are essentially matters for the Executive to address, with possible participation from Congress and the sovereign people as higher levels of policy action arise. Its search for solutions, in the course of several presidencies, has led the Executive to the peace settlement process. As has been pointed out repetitively in the pleadings and the oral arguments, the latest move in the Executive’s quest for peace—the MOA–AD—would have not been a good deal for the country if it had materialized. This Court, however, seasonably intervened and aborted the planned signing of the agreement. The Executive, for its part, found it wise and appropriate to fully heed the signals from our initial action and from the public outcry the MOA–AD generated; it backtracked at the earliest opportunity in a manner consistent with its efforts to avoid or minimize bloodshed while preserving the peace process. At the moment, the peace and order problem is still with the Executive where the matter should be; the initiative still lies with that branch of government. The Court’s role, under the constitutional scheme that we are sworn to uphold, is to allow the initiative to be where the Constitution says it should be. We cannot and should not interfere unless our action is unavoidably necessary because the Executive is acting beyond what is allowable, or because it has failed to act in the way it should act, under the Constitution and our laws.
x x x x
Rather than complicate the issues further with judicial pronouncements that may have unforeseen or unforeseeable effects on the present fighting and on the solutions already being applied, this Court should exercise restraint as the fears immediately generated by a signed and concluded MOA–AD have been addressed and essentially laid to rest. Thus, rather than pro–actively act on areas that now are more executive than judicial, we should act with calibrated restraint along the lines dictated by the constitutional delineation of powers. Doing so cannot be equated to the failure of this Court to act as its judicial duty requires; as I mentioned earlier, we have judicially addressed the concerns posed with positive effects and we shall not hesitate to judicially act in the future, as may be necessary, to ensure that the integrity of our constitutional and statutory rules and standards are not compromised. If we exercise restraint at all, it is because the best interests of the nation and our need to show national solidarity at this point so require, in order that the branch of government in the best position to act can proceed to act.
x x x x
x x x. We can effectively move as we have shown in this MOA–AD affair, but let this move be at the proper time and while we ourselves observe the limitations the Constitution commonly impose on all branches of government in delineating their respective roles.51 (Emphasis supplied)
[i]nsistence on the existence of a case or controversy before the judiciary undertakes a review of legislation gives it the opportunity, denied to the legislature, of seeing the actual operation of the statute as it is applied to actual facts and thus enables to it to reach sounder judgment.53
[b]asic in litigation raising constitutional issues is the requirement that there must be an actual case or controversy. This Court cannot render an advisory opinion. We assume that the Constitution binds all other constitutional departments, instrumentalities, and organs. We are aware that in the exercise of their various powers, they do interpret the text of the Constitution in the light of contemporary needs that they should address. A policy that reduces this Court to an adviser for official acts by the other departments that have not yet been done would unnecessarily tax our resources. It is inconsistent with our role as final arbiter and adjudicator and weakens the entire system of the Rule of Law. Our power of judicial review is a duty to make a final and binding construction of law. This power should generally be reserved when the departments have exhausted any and all acts that would remedy any perceived violation of right. The rationale that defines the extent of our doctrines laying down exceptions to our rules on justiciability are clear: Not only should the pleadings show a convincing violation of a right, but the impact should be shown to be so grave, imminent, and irreparable that any delayed exercise of judicial review or deference would undermine fundamental principles that should be enjoyed by the party complaining or the constituents that they legitimately represent.
The requirement of an “actual case,” thus, means that the case before this Court “involves a conflict of legal rights, an assertion of opposite legal claims susceptible of judicial resolution; the case must not be moot or academic based on extra–legal or other similar considerations not cognizable by a court of justice.” Furthermore, “the controversy needs to be definite and concrete, bearing upon the legal relations of parties who are pitted against each other due to their adverse legal interests.” Thus, the adverse position of the parties must be sufficient enough for the case to be pleaded and for this Court to be able to provide the parties the proper relief/s prayed for.
The requirement of an ‘actual case’ will ensure that this Court will not issue advisory opinions. It prevents us from using the immense power of judicial review absent a party that can sufficiently argue from a standpoint with real and substantial interests.55
x x x not a single contraceptive has yet been submitted to the FDA pursuant [to the] RH Law. It [behooves] the Court to await its determination which drugs or devices are declared by the FDA as safe, it being the agency tasked to ensure that food and medicines available to the public are safe for public consumption. x x x Indeed, the various kinds of contraceptives must first be measured up to the constitutional yardstick x x x to be determined as the case presents itself.57 (Emphasis in the original)
x x x any attack on the validity of Section 14 of the RH Law is premature, as the Department of Education, Culture and Sports have yet to formulate any curriculum on age–appropriate reproductive health education. At this point, one can only speculate [on the] contents, manner and medium of instruction that would be used to educate the adolescents and whether [these] would contradict the religious beliefs of petitioners, and validate their apprehensions. x x x.
x x x x
While the Court notes the possibility that educators could raise their objection to their participation in the reproductive health education program provided under Section 14 of the RH Law on the ground that the same violates their religious beliefs, the Court reserves its judgment should an actual case be filed before it.59 (Emphasis in the original)
x x x foregoing petitions have seriously alleged that the constitutional human right to life, speech and religion and other fundamental rights mentioned above have been violated by the assailed legislation, the Court has authority to take cognizance of these kindred petitions and determine if the RH Law can indeed pass constitutional scrutiny.60
[a] facial challenge is allowed to be made to a vague statute and to one which is overbroad because of possible “chilling effect” upon protected speech. The theory is that “[w]hen statutes regulate or proscribe speech and no readily apparent construction suggests itself as a vehicle for rehabilitating the statutes in a single prosecution, the transcendent value to all society of constitutionally protected expression is deemed to justify allowing attacks on overly broad statutes with no requirement that the person making the attack demonstrate that his own conduct could not be regulated by a statute drawn with narrow specificity.” The possible harm to society in permitting some unprotected speech to go unpunished is outweighed by the possibility that the protected speech of others may be deterred and perceived grievances left to fester because of possible inhibitory effects of overly broad statutes.
This rationale does not apply to penal statutes. Criminal statutes have general in terrorem effect resulting from their very existence, and, if facial challenge is allowed for this reason alone, the State may well be prevented from enacting laws against socially harmful conduct. In the area of criminal law, the law cannot take chances as in the area of free speech.
The overbreadth and vagueness doctrines then have special application only to free speech cases. They are inapt for testing the validity of penal statutes. As the U.S. Supreme Court put it, in an opinion by Chief Justice Rehnquist, “we have not recognized an ‘overbreadth’ doctrine outside the limited context of the First Amendment.” In Broadrick v. Oklahoma, the Court ruled that “claims of facial overbreadth have been entertained in cases involving statutes which, by their terms, seek to regulate only spoken words” and, again, that “overbreadth claims, if entertained at all, have been curtailed when invoked against ordinary criminal laws that are sought to be applied to protected conduct.” For this reason, it has been held that “a facial challenge to a legislative Act is … the most difficult challenge to mount successfully, since the challenger must establish that no set of circumstances exists under which the Act would be valid.” x x x.
In sum, the doctrines of strict scrutiny, overbreadth, and vagueness are analytical tools developed for testing “on their faces” statutes in free speech cases or, as they are called in American law, First Amendment cases. They cannot be made to do service when what is involved is a criminal statute. With respect to such statute, the established rule is that “one to whom application of a statute is constitutional will not be heard to attack the statute on the ground that impliedly it might also be taken as applying to other persons or other situations in which its application might be unconstitutional.” x x x.66 (Emphasis supplied)
First and foremost, the overbreadth doctrine is an analytical tool developed for testing “on their faces” statutes in free speech cases, also known under the American Law as First Amendment cases.
x x x x
Thus, claims of facial overbreadth are entertained in cases involving statutes which, by their terms, seek to regulate only “spoken words” and again, that “overbreadth claims, if entertained at all, have been curtailed when invoked against ordinary criminal laws that are sought to be applied to protected conduct.” Here, the incontrovertible fact remains that PP 1017 pertains to a spectrum of conduct, not free speech, which is manifestly subject to state regulation.
Second, facial invalidation of laws is considered as “manifestly strong medicine,” to be used “sparingly and only as a last resort,” and is “generally disfavored;” The reason for this is obvious. Embedded in the traditional rules governing constitutional adjudication is the principle that a person to whom a law may be applied will not be heard to challenge a law on the ground that it may conceivably be applied unconstitutionally to others, i.e., in other situations not before the Court. A writer and scholar in Constitutional Law explains further:The most distinctive feature of the overbreadth technique is that it marks an exception to some of the usual rules of constitutional litigation. Ordinarily, a particular litigant claims that a statute is unconstitutional as applied to him or her; if the litigant prevails, the courts carve away the unconstitutional aspects of the law by invalidating its improper applications on a case to case basis. Moreover, challengers to a law are not permitted to raise the rights of third parties and can only assert their own interests. In overbreadth analysis, those rules give way; challenges are permitted to raise the rights of third parties; and the court invalidates the entire statute “on its face,” not merely “as applied for” so that the overbroad law becomes unenforceable until a properly authorized court construes it more narrowly. The factor that motivates courts to depart from the normal adjudicatory rules is the concern with the “chilling;” deterrent effect of the overbroad statute on third parties not courageous enough to bring suit. The Court assumes that an overbroad law’s “very existence may cause others not before the court to refrain from constitutionally protected speech or expression.” An overbreadth ruling is designed to remove that deterrent effect on the speech of those third parties.
In other words, a facial challenge using the overbreadth doctrine will require the Court to examine PP 1017 and pinpoint its flaws and defects, not on the basis of its actual operation to petitioners, but on the assumption or prediction that its very existence may cause others not before the Court to refrain from constitutionally protected speech or expression. In Younger v. Harris, it was held that:[T]he task of analyzing a proposed statute, pinpointing its deficiencies, and requiring correction of these deficiencies before the statute is put into effect, is rarely if ever an appropriate task for the judiciary. The combination of the relative remoteness of the controversy, the impact on the legislative process of the relief sought, and above all the speculative and amorphous nature of the required line–by–line analysis of detailed statutes,...ordinarily results in a kind of case that is wholly unsatisfactory for deciding constitutional questions, whichever way they might be decided.
And third, a facial challenge on the ground of overbreadth is the most difficult challenge to mount successfully, since the challenger must establish that there can be no instance when the assailed law may be valid. Here, petitioners did not even attempt to show whether this situation exists.68 (Emphasis in the original)
x x x. The rule established in our jurisdiction is, only statutes on free speech, religious freedom, and other fundamental rights may be facially challenged. Under no case may ordinary penal statutes be subjected to a facial challenge.72
Distinguished from an as–applied challenge which considers only extant facts affecting real litigants, a facial invalidation is an examination of the entire law, pinpointing its flaws and defects, not only on the basis of its actual operation to the parties, but also on the assumption or prediction that its very existence may cause others not before the court to refrain from constitutionally protected speech or activities.
Justice Mendoza accurately phrased the subtitle in his concurring opinion that the vagueness and overbreadth doctrines, as grounds for a facial challenge, are not applicable to penal laws. A litigant cannot thus successfully mount a facial challenge against a criminal statute on either vagueness or overbreadth grounds.
The allowance of a facial challenge in free speech cases is justified by the aim to avert the “chilling effect” on protected speech, the exercise of which should not at all times be abridged. As reflected earlier, this rationale is inapplicable to plain penal statutes that generally bear an “in terrorem effect” in deterring socially harmful conduct. In fact, the legislature may even forbid and penalize acts formerly considered innocent and lawful, so long as it refrains from diminishing or dissuading the exercise of constitutionally protected rights.
The Court reiterated that there are “critical limitations by which a criminal statute may be challenged” and “underscored that an ‘on–its–face’ invalidation of penal statutes x x x may not be allowed.”[T]he rule established in our jurisdiction is, only statutes on free speech, religious freedom, and other fundamental rights may be facially challenged. Under no case may ordinary penal statutes be subjected to a facial challenge. The rationale is obvious. If a facial challenge to a penal statute is permitted, the prosecution of crimes may be hampered. No prosecution would be possible. A strong criticism against employing a facial challenge in the case of penal statutes, if the same is allowed, would effectively go against the grain of the doctrinal requirement of an existing and concrete controversy before judicial power may be appropriately exercised. A facial challenge against a penal statute is, at best, amorphous and speculative. It would, essentially, force the court to consider third parties who are not before it. As I have said in my opposition to the allowance of a facial challenge to attack penal statutes, such a test will impair the State’s ability to deal with crime. If warranted, there would be nothing that can hinder an accused from defeating the State’s power to prosecute on a mere showing that, as applied to third parties, the penal statute is vague or overbroad, notwithstanding that the law is clear as applied to him.
It is settled, on the other hand, that the application of the overbreadth doctrine is limited to a facial kind of challenge and, owing to the given rationale of a facial challenge, applicable only to free speech cases.
By its nature, the overbreadth doctrine has to necessarily apply a facial type of invalidation in order to plot areas of protected speech, inevitably almost always under situations not before the court, that are impermissibly swept by the substantially overbroad regulation. Otherwise stated, a statute cannot be properly analyzed for being substantially overbroad if the court confines itself only to facts as applied to the litigants.
x x x x
In restricting the overbreadth doctrine to free speech claims, the Court, in at least two cases, observed that the US Supreme Court has not recognized an overbreadth doctrine outside the limited context of the First Amendment, and that claims of facial overbreadth have been entertained in cases involving statutes which, by their terms, seek to regulate only spoken words. In Virginia v. Hicks, it was held that rarely, if ever, will an overbreadth challenge succeed against a law or regulation that is not specifically addressed to speech or speech–related conduct. Attacks on overly broad statutes are justified by the “transcendent value to all society of constitutionally protected expression.”74 (Emphasis and underscoring in the original)
a facial challenge only applies to cases where the free speech and its cognates are asserted before the court. While as a general rule penal statutes cannot be subjected to facial attacks, a provision in a statute can be struck down as unconstitutional when there is a clear showing that there is an imminent possibility that its broad language will allow ordinary law enforcement to cause prior restraints of speech and the value of that speech is such that its absence will be socially irreparable.75
First, the ground for the challenge of the provision in the statute is that it violates freedom of expression or any of its cognates;
Second, the language in the statute is impermissibly vague;
Third, the vagueness in the text of the statute in question allows for an interpretation that will allow prior restraints;
Fourth, the “chilling effect” is not simply because the provision is found in a penal statute but because there can be a clear showing that there are special circumstances which show the imminence that the provision will be invoked by law enforcers;
Fifth, the application of the provision in question will entail prior restraints; and
Sixth, the value of the speech that will be restrained is such that its absence will be socially irreparable. This will necessarily mean balancing between the state interests protected by the regulation and the value of the speech excluded from society.76
It sufficiently appears from the record in this case that it is a controversy between the Roman Catholic Church on one side and the Independent Filipino Church on the other. That it is the purpose of the plaintiffs, if they secure possession of the image, to place it in the chapel of the Independent Church is also very clear. What number of the inhabitants of the town (2,460 according to the census) are members of the Roman Catholic Church and what part are members of the Independent Filipino Church does not appear. But it is very apparent that many of the inhabitants are opposed to the transfer of the image from the Roman Catholic Church. Under the circumstances, the thirteen plaintiffs do not fairly represent all of the inhabitants of the town. Their interest and the interests of some of the others are diametrically opposed. For this reason this action can not be maintained.81 (Emphasis supplied)
The complaint in the instant case explicitly declared that the plaintiffs–appellants instituted the “present class suit under Section 12, Rule 3, of the Rules of Court in behalf of CMI subscribing stockholders” but did not state the number of said CMI subscribing stockholders so that the trial court could not infer, much less make sure as explicitly required by the statutory provision, that the parties actually before it were sufficiently numerous and representative in order that all interests concerned might be fully protected, and that it was impracticable to bring such a large number of parties before the court.
x x x x
Appellants, furthermore, insisted that insufficiency of number in a class suit was not a ground for dismissal of one action. This Court has, however, said that where it appeared that no sufficient representative parties had been joined, the dismissal by the trial court of the action, despite the contention by plaintiffs that it was a class suit, was correct.83 (Emphasis supplied)
x x x. What makes the situation a proper case for a class suit is the circumstance that there is only one right or cause of action pertaining or belonging in common to many persons, not separately or severally to distinct individuals.
x x x x
The other factor that serves to distinguish the rule on class suits from that of permissive joinder of parties is, of course, the numerousness of parties involved in the former. The rule is that for a class suit to be allowed, it is needful inter alia that the parties be so numerous that it would be impracticable to bring them all before the court.88
In any case, respondents’ lack of cause of action cannot be cured by the filing of a class suit. As correctly pointed out by Mr. Justice Jose C. Vitug during the deliberations, “an element of a class suit is the adequacy of representation. In determining the question of fair and adequate representation of members of a class, the court must consider (a) whether the interest of the named party is coextensive with the interest of the other members of the class; (b) the proportion of those made parties as it so bears to the total membership of the class; and, (c) any other factor bearing on the ability of the named party to speak for the rest of the class.
The rules require that courts must make sure that the persons intervening should be sufficiently numerous to fully protect the interests of all concerned. In the present controversy, Islamic Da'wah Council of the Philippines, Inc., seeks in effect to assert the interests not only of the Muslims in the Philippines but of the whole Muslim world as well. Private respondents obviously lack the sufficiency of numbers to represent such a global group; neither have they been able to demonstrate the identity of their interests with those they seek to represent. Unless it can be shown that there can be a safe guaranty that those absent will be adequately represented by those present, a class suit, given its magnitude in this instance, would be unavailing.95
The State likewise guarantees universal access to medically safe, non–abortifac[i]ent, effective, legal, affordable, and quality reproductive health care services, methods, devices, supplies which do not prevent the implantation of a fertilized ovum as determined by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and relevant information and education thereon according to the priority needs of women, children and other underprivileged sectors x x x. (Emphasis supplied)
(d) The provision of ethical and medically safe, legal, accessible, affordable, non–abortifac[i]ent, effective and quality reproductive health care services and supplies is essential in the promotion of people’s right to health, especially those of women, the poor and the marginalized, and shall be incorporated as a component of basic health care[.] (Emphasis supplied)
(j) While this Act recognizes that abortion is illegal and punishable by law, the government shall ensure that all women needing care for post–abortive complications and all other complications from pregnancy, labor and delivery and related issues shall be treated and counseled in a humane, nonjudgmental and compassionate manner in accordance with law and medical ethics[.] (Emphasis supplied)
Sec. 9. The Philippine National Drug Formulary System and Family Planning Supplies. – The National Drug Formulary shall include hormonal contraceptives, intrauterine devices, injectibles and other safe, legal, non–abortifac[i]ent and effective family planning products and supplies. x x x. (Emphasis supplied)
(a) Abortifacient refers to any drug or device that induces abortion or the destruction of a fetus inside the mother’s womb or the prevention of the fertilized ovum to reach and be implanted in the mother’s womb upon determination of the FDA.
A foolproof yardstick in constitutional construction is the intention underlying the provision under consideration. Thus, it has been held that the Court in construing a Constitution should bear in mind the object sought to be accomplished by its adoption, and the evils, if any, sought to be prevented or remedied. A doubtful provision will be examined in the light of the history of the times, and the condition and circumstances under which the Constitution was framed. The object is to ascertain the reason which induced the framers of the Constitution to enact the particular provision and the purpose sought to be accomplished thereby, in order to construe the whole as to make the words consonant to that reason and calculated to effect that purpose.129
While it is permissible in this jurisdiction to consult the debates and proceedings of the constitutional convention in order to arrive at the reason and purpose of the resulting Constitution, resort thereto may be had only when other guides fail as said proceedings are powerless to vary the terms of the Constitution when the meaning is clear. Debates in the constitutional convention “are of value as showing the views of the individual members, and as indicating the reasons for their votes, but they give us no light as to the views of the large majority who did not talk, much less of the mass of our fellow citizens whose votes at the polls gave that instrument the force of fundamental law. We think it safer to construe the constitution from what appears upon its face.” The proper interpretation therefore depends more on how it was understood by the people adopting it than in the framers’s understanding thereof. 131 (Emphasis supplied)
FR. BERNAS: x x x The intent of this addition is to preclude the Supreme Court from following the United States doctrine which does not begin to weigh the life of the unborn against that of the mother until the fetus has reached a viable stage of development. In American doctrine, during the first six months of pregnancy, the only requirement for allowing abortion is that it will not be harmful to the mother. It is only after the sixth month that the life of the fetus begins to be weighed against the life of the mother.
The innovation does not say that from the first moment the sperm and the egg shake hands, human life is already present, much less does it say that at that moment, a soul is infused; nor does the innovation say that the right to life of the fertilized ovum must prevail over the life of the mother all the time. All that the innovation says is that from the moment of fertilization, the ovum should be treated as life whose worth must be weighed against the life of the woman, not necessarily saying that they are of equal worth.136
x x x. The Argument in Roe v. Wade is that the important thing is the privacy of the mother’s womb. If she wants to get rid of that fetus anytime within the first six months, it is allowed provided it can be done safely even if there is no medical reason for it. That is the only thing contemplated in this.137
BISHOP BACANI: The formulation reached by the Committee was “fertilized ovum,” to precisely define what we meant. And it will be brought forward in another committee report that the right to life begins with conception. That is meant to explain what is understood on the committee report by the word “conception.” The Gentleman was asking whether this is a human person. That is not the assertion yet of this section. But what we do assert is this, that this is human life already. If I may be allowed to read the results of the report by Fr. Robert Henley, who is also a Jesuit like Fr. Bernas, it seems they are in all camps. Let me just read this into the record. He says:
Specializing as it does in fetal physiology, Georgetown University, probably more than almost any other university, is aware of the biological facts regarding the beginnings of human life.
From the moment of conception a new biological entity exists. The entity cannot be considered as physically identical with the mother’s body. To consider the matter broadly, there is no essential difference between an ovum fertilized within the body and an ovum fertilized outside the parent’s body or rejected in an egg or emerging undeveloped, as in marsupials, in an external pouch. To destroy this entity is to destroy an existing life. Since this life entity is clearly within the development of the human species, there is obviously nothing added on a human being. Its destruction is the destruction of human life. Murder cannot be justified by a legal fiction. 138
MS. AQUINO: Madam President, before the issue on the right to life is lost in the interdebate on the vexing question of the U.S. bases, I am intervening to settle some matters about the matter of the right to life.
I am very much alarmed by the absolutist claim to morality in the defense of human life, the defense that was raised by Commissioner Villegas. There is presently a raging debate on the philo–ethical considerations of the origin or the beginnings of human life that at this moment, I do not think we are in any position to preempt the debate and come up with a premature conclusion on the matter. There are still pressing questions in my mind, such as: Is the biological existence of a potentiality for life synonymous with human personality? Is viability synonymous with life? There are at least a dozen theories that attempt to address themselves to this kind of question. For example, we are aware of the Thomistic concept of hylomorphism which posits the complementarity of matter and form. The theory demands that before human life is assumed, the material body demands a certain measure of organization and form that makes it capable of receiving a soul. It operates on the premise that individuality is the basic premise and the fundamental criterion for human life and human personality and individuality requires consciousness and self–reflection.
There is another theory which states that human life begins two to three weeks after conception; that is after the possibility on the process of twinning the zygote or the recombination of the zygote is finally ruled out. These are questions that need to be addressed in our Civil Code. For example, in the context of this discussion, Articles 40 and 41 are settled that personality is determined by birth, and that for all purposes favorable to it, a conceived baby is considered born but subject to the conditions of Article 41 which says that personality is determined by live birth. I would think that Articles 40 and 41 are not only settled, but are the most practical approach to the raging debate on the matter of human life. It lays as the criteria for its conclusion the individual biological criteria, with special emphasis on the physical separation of the fetus from the mother and the requirements of viability.
I am alarmed by the way we tend to preempt this kind of discussion by invoking the claims of the righteousness of morality. These questions for me are transcendental that we cannot even attempt to address any conclusion on the matter unless we can address the question without temerity or without bigotry. Besides, the level of human knowledge on this debate is so severely restricted that to preempt the debate is, I guess, to preempt the deliberations and finally the possibility of agreement on the diverse theories on the matter.139
MR. VILLEGAS: Madam President, it is precisely because this issue is transcendental that we have to make also a transcendental statement. There is no debate among medical scientists that human life begins at conception, so that is already a settled question. We are talking about life. As I said, we are not talking about human personality, neither are we saying that the human person can be decided precisely by law, nor at what time it will have the right to property and inheritance. The only right that we are protecting is the right to life at its beginning, which medical science genetics has already confirmed as beginning at conception.140 (Emphases supplied)
REV. RIGOS: x x x. But like a few people who spoke this morning, I am a bit disturbed by the second sentence: “The right to life extends to the fertilized ovum.”
In discussing this proposed sentence, did the Committee consider the sensibilities of some religious groups which do not look at the fertilized ovum as having reached that stage that it can be described as human life?148
x x x. We would like to have a constitutional damper already on the assault to human life at its early stages. And we realized that it can be possible to more easily change x x x easier to change legislation on abortion. Hence, we would like to be able to prevent those changes in the laws on abortion later.151
BISHOP BACANI: I would like to remind Reverend Rigos that when we talk about this, it is not a question of religious boundaries. In fact, let me just read what is contained in an article given by one of my researchers. It says that many scholarly Protestant and Jewish leaders are prominent in the pro–light movement – and they are referring to the anti–abortion movement. I do not want to put this simply on the denominational plain, and it is misleading to put it at that level.
x x x x
BISHOP BACANI: Because these are people who are not Catholics – who are Jewish, Protestants, even atheists – but who are against abortion. 153
MS. AQUINO: I cannot. This is very instructive because as the Commissioner will note, even this Commission cannot settle the question of whether a fertilized egg has the right to life or not. Those experts in the field of medicine and theology cannot settle this question. It is bad enough for us to pre–empt this controversial issue by constitutionalizing the ovum; it would be doubly tragic for us to provide for ambiguities which may even disturb settled jurisprudence.164
MR. NOLLEDO: I do not think there is ambiguity because the fertilized egg, in the normal course of events, will be developed into a human being, a fetus, and as long as the normal course of events is followed. I think that the right to life exists and the Constitution should recognize that right to life. We do not presume accidents; we do not presume ambiguities. We presume that as long as it is categorized as a fertilized ovum, it will ripen into human personality.165 (Emphasis supplied)
MR. VILLEGAS: x x x. Is it human? Genetics gives an equally categorical “yes.” At the moment of conception, the nuclei of the ovum and the sperm rupture. As this happens 23 chromosomes from the ovum combine with 23 chromosomes of the sperm to form a total of 46 chromosomes. A chromosome count of 46 is found only — and I repeat, only — in human cells. Therefore, the fertilized ovum is human. (Emphasis supplied)
Since these questions have been answered affirmatively, we must conclude that if the fertilized ovum is both alive and human, then, as night follows day, it must be human life. Its nature is human.168
MR. VILLEGAS: As I explained in the sponsorship speech, it is when the ovum is fertilized by the sperm that there is human life. Just to repeat: first, there is obviously life because it starts to nourish itself, it starts to grow as any living being, and it is human because at the moment of fertilization, the chromosomes that combined in the fertilized ovum are the chromosomes that are uniquely found in human beings and are not found in any other living being. 169 (Emphasis supplied)
MR. VILLEGAS: As I stated in my sponsorship speech, 99 percent of the cases indicated that taking care of the health of the mother is taking care of the child and vice versa. Because of the progress of medical science, the situations when a moral dilemma exists are very, very few. The intention behind the statement is precisely for the State to make sure that it protects the life of the pregnant mother. She goes to all sorts of trouble as we have discussed in the provisions on health. Protecting the life of the mother, giving her all the necessary social services will protect the child. So it happens only in very, very few instances which we mentioned, like ectopic pregnancies when the fertilized ovum is implanted outside of the uterus. I repeat, medical science has made the situation very, very exceptional.
x x x x
MR. VILLEGAS: Madam President, as I said in response to the question yesterday of Commissioner Suarez, 99 percent of the cases related to protection of the mother’s health, making sure that she is in the right working conditions and that she is not subjected to stress, show that there are so many things that can endanger the life of the unborn because the health of the mother is not sufficiently cared for. This is really a prolife provision which emphasizes the fact that in most instances, protecting the life of the mother is also protecting the life of the unborn.173 (Emphasis supplied)
MATERNAL MORTALITY: BY MAIN CAUSE Number, Rate/1000 Livebirths & Percent Distribution Philippines, 2009 CAUSE Number Rate Percent* TOTAL 1,599 0.9 100.0 1. Complications related to pregnancy occurring in the course of labor, delivery and puerperium 655 0.4 41.0 2. Hypertension complicating pregnancy, childbirth and puerperium 513 0.3 32.1 3. Postpartum hemorrhage 286 0.2 17.9 4. Pregnancy with abortive outcome 142 0.1 8.9 5. Hemorrhage in early pregnancy 3 0.0 0.2*Percent share to total number of maternal deaths
MR. VILLEGAS: x x x. And we said that even in those instances, which I consider to be less than one percent of the situation, there is a moral principle which we referred to as the principle of double effect in which if one has to save the life of the mother in an operation, it is morally and legally permissible to so operate even if the child will have to be indirectly sacrificed. There is no murder involved there because one does not intend the death of the child. One is correcting a medical aberration of the mother.
x x x x
MR. VILLEGAS: It is the same principle of double effect. If you are not killing the mother directly, if the operation is to save the child and there is the indirect effect of the mother’s life being sacrificed, then I think the principle of double effect also applies.181
BISHOP BACANI: Madam President, may I comment on the unwanted babies. I was reading this little book on a study of unwanted pregnancies and the interesting thing is this: In practically all cases, unwanted pregnancies became wanted babies. In fact, there were more unwanted pregnancies that became wanted babies than wanted pregnancies in the beginning which turned sour. 184
Consider the zygote my parents produced in 1961, leading to my birth in 1962. I am not an identical twin. But that zygote could have split spontaneously, resulting in identical twins. If it had, presumably I would not have existed, because it is implausible to identify me with either of the twins in that counterfactual scenario. If that is right, then the existence of the zygote my parents produced was not sufficient for my existence, from which it follows that I am not numerically identical to that zygote. The very possibility of twinning belies the claim that we originated at conception.224
Clearly, the single–cell zygote has the potential to develop in such a way that eventually produces one of us. (Note: I do not say that the single–cell zygote has the potential to become one of us – a statement that would imply numerical identity.) But the importance of this potential is dubious. Now that we know that mammals can be cloned from somatic cells – bodily cells other than sperm, eggs, and their stem–cell precursors – we know that, in principle, each of millions of cells in your body has the potential to develop into a full human organism. Surely this confers no particular moral status on your many individual cells; nor does it suggest that each cell is one of us. Once again, a full complement of DNA is not enough to make one of us.232
Even a child inside the womb already has life. No less than the Constitution recognizes the life of the unborn from conception, that the State must protect equally with the life of the mother. If the unborn already has life, then the cessation thereof even prior to the child being delivered, qualifies as death.255 (Emphasis supplied)
SEC. 9. The Philippine National Drug Formulary System and Family Planning Supplies. – The National Drug Formulary shall include hormonal contraceptives, intrauterine devices, injectables and other safe, legal, non–abortifacient and effective family planning products and supplies. The Philippine National Drug Formulary System (PNDFS) shall be observed in selecting drugs including family planning supplies that will be included or removed from the Essential Drugs List (EDL) in accordance with existing practice and in consultation with reputable medical associations in the Philippines. For the purpose of this Act, any product or supply included or to be included in the EDL must have a certification from the FDA that said product and supply is made available on the condition that it is not to be used as an abortifacient.
These products and supplies shall also be included in the regular purchase of essential medicines and supplies of all national hospitals: Provided, further, That the foregoing offices shall not purchase or acquire by any means emergency contraceptive pills, postcoital pills, abortifacients that will be used for such purpose and their other forms or equivalent. (Emphasis supplied)
SEC. 7. Access to Family Planning – All accredited public health facilities shall provide a full range of modern family planning methods, which shall also include medical consultations, supplies and necessary and reasonable procedures for poor and marginalized couples having infertility issues who desire to have children: Provided, That family planning services shall likewise be extended by private health facilities to paying patients with the option to grant free care and services to indigents, except in the case of non–maternity specialty hospitals and hospitals owned and operated by a religious group but they have the option to provide such full range of modern family planning methods: Provided further, That these hospitals shall immediately refer the person seeking such care and services to another health facility which is conveniently accessible: Provided finally, That the person is not in an emergency condition or serious case as defined in Republic Act No. 8344.
SEC. 23. Prohibited Acts. – The following acts are prohibited:
(a) Any health care service provider, whether public or private, who shall:
x x x x
(3) Refuse to extend quality health care services and information on account of the person’s marital status, gender, age, religious convictions, personal circumstances, or nature of work: Provided, That the conscientious objection of a health care service provider based on his/her ethical or religious beliefs shall be respected; however, the conscientious objector shall immediately refer the person seeking such care and services to another health care service provider within the same facility or one which is conveniently accessible: Provided, further, That the person is not in an emergency condition or serious case as defined in Republic Act No. 8344, which penalizes the refusal of hospitals and medical clinics to administer appropriate initial medical treatment and support in emergency and serious cases[.] (Emphasis supplied)
At the time of being admitted as a member of the medical profession:
I solemnly pledge to consecrate my life to the service of humanity;
I will give to my teachers the respect and gratitude that is their due;
I will practice my profession with conscience and dignity;
The health of my patient will be my first consideration;
I will respect the secrets that are confided in me, even after the patient has died;
I will maintain by all means in my power, the honor and the noble traditions of the medical profession;
My colleagues will be my sisters and brothers;
I will not permit considerations of age, disease or disability, creed, ethnic origin, gender, nationality, political affiliation, race, sexual orientation, social standing or any other factor to intervene between my duty and my patient;
I will maintain the utmost respect for human life;
I will not use my medical knowledge to violate human rights and civil liberties, even under threat;
I make these promises solemnly, freely and upon my honor.274 (Emphasis supplied)
Physicians’ rights to refuse to participate in medical procedures that offend their conscience may be incompatible with patients’ rights to receive lawful, medically indicated treatment. Historically, the goal of medicine has been to provide care to the sick. The World Medical Association’s modern variant of the Hippocratic Oath, the Declaration of Geneva, inspires the graduating physician to pledge that, “The health of my patient will be my first consideration”. For many who enter medicine, the commitment to assist their fellow human beings and pursue a path of personal salvation through this professional calling is religiously inspired. A conflict of interest can arise if the physician’s religious or other conscientious convictions are in tension with medically indicated procedures. The obvious case is therapeutic abortion, but analogous cases include contraceptive sterilization and withdrawal of life support from otherwise viable patients. Physicians who give priority to their own moral and spiritual convictions over their patients’ need and desire for medically indicated care face a conflict that needs resolution.
The ethical conflict can be avoided through mutual accommodation; physicians have the right to decide whom to treat, and patients have the right to decide from whom they will receive care. Physicians do not have the same ethical duties to nonpatients as to patients except in emergency circumstances. In all other circumstances, physicians are at liberty to choose those for whom they will accept the responsibility of care. If there are services they will not perform, physicians should make the fact known to patients for whom they have accepted responsibility. Doing so not only saves patients the distress of seeking those services and being turned down, it also saves physicians from the dilemma of unfulfilled responsibilities to those whose care they have agreed to undertake. This arrangement is well understood in medicine; physicians who notify prospective patients that they are, for instance, pediatricians, will not be asked to treat those requiring geriatric care, and geriatricians who do not have to accept patients seeking pediatric services. More explicit disclosure is required, of course, when prospective patients may reasonably expect that care will be available from the specialists they approach. Obstetrician–gynecologies who will not participate in abortion procedures must make that fact clear before forming patient–physician relationships.”275
ARTICLE II
DUTIES OF PHYSICIANS TO THEIR PATIENTS
Section 5. A physician should exercise good faith and honesty in expressing opinion/s as to the diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment of a case under his/her care. A physician shall respect the right of the patient to refuse medical treatment. Timely notice of the worsening of the disease should be given to the patient and/or family. A physician shall not conceal nor exaggerate the patient’s conditions except when it is to the latter’s best interest. A physician shall obtain from the patient a voluntary informed consent. In case of unconsciousness or in a state of mental deficiency the informed consent may be given by a spouse or immediate relatives and in the absence of both, by the party authorized by an advanced directive of the patient. Informed consent in the case of minor should be given by the parents or guardian, members of the immediate family that are of legal age. (Emphasis supplied)
While providers have a right to their moral beliefs, the right does not allow health–care providers to violate their professional and legal obligations to the patient. Policies on health–care provider refusals should be carefully crafted to maximize the rights of individuals to their beliefs without extending this “protection” so far that it prevents patients from getting the medical care or information they need.276
Religious initiatives to propose, legislate, and enforce laws that protect denial of care or assistance to patients, (almost invariably women in need), and bar their right of access to lawful health services, are abuses of conscientious objection clauses that aggravate public divisiveness and bring unjustified criticism toward more mainstream religious beliefs. Physicians who abuse the right to conscientious objection and fail to refer patients to non–objecting colleagues are not fulfilling their profession’s covenant with society.277
SEC. 7. Access to Family Planning. – All accredited public health facilities shall provide a full range of modern family planning methods, which shall also include medical consultations, supplies and necessary and reasonable procedures for poor and marginal couples having infertility issues who desire to have children: Provided, That family planning services shall likewise be extended by private health facilities to paying patients with the option to grant free care and services to indigents, except in the case of non–maternity specialty hospitals and hospitals owned and operated by a religious group, but they have the option to provide such full range of modern family planning methods: Provided, further, That these hospitals shall immediately refer the person seeking such care and services to another health facility which is conveniently accessible: Provided, finally, That the person is not in an emergency condition or serious case as defined in Republic Act No. 8344.
x x x x (Emphasis supplied)
Section 5. No law shall be made respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. The free exercise and enjoyment of religious profession and worship, without discrimination or preference, shall forever be allowed. No religious test shall be required for the exercise of civil or political rights.280
Section 6. The separation of Church and State shall be inviolable.282
x x x the exercise of religious freedom can be regulated by the State when it will bring about the clear and present danger of some substantive evil which the State is duty–bound to prevent, i.e., serious detriment to the more overriding interest of public health, public morals, or public welfare. A laissez faire policy on the exercise of religion can be seductive to the liberal mind but history counsels the Court against its blind adoption as religion is and continues to be a volatile area of concern in our country today. Across the sea and in our shore, the bloodiest and bitterest wars fought by men were caused by irreconcilable religious differences.285
Although our constitutional history and interpretation mandate benevolent neutrality, benevolent neutrality does not mean that the Court ought to grant exemptions every time a free exercise claim comes before it. But it does mean that the Court will not look with hostility or act indifferently towards religious beliefs and practices and that it will strive to accommodate them when it can within flexible constitutional limits; it does mean that the Court will not simply dismiss a claim under the Free Exercise Clause because the conduct in question offends a law or the orthodox view for this precisely is the protection afforded by the religion clauses of the Constitution, i.e., that in the absence of legislation granting exemption from a law of general applicability, the Court can carve out an exception when the religion clauses justify it. While the Court cannot adopt a doctrinal formulation that can eliminate the difficult questions of judgment in determining the degree of burden on religious practice or importance of the state interest or the sufficiency of the means adopted by the state to pursue its interest, the Court can set a doctrine on the ideal towards which religious clause jurisprudence should be directed. We here lay down that doctrine that in Philippine jurisdiction, we adopt that benevolent neutrality approach not only because our constitutional history and interpretation indubitably show that benevolent neutrality is the launching pad from which the Court should take off in interpreting religion clause cases. The ideal towards which this approach is directed is the protection of religious liberty ‘not only for a minority, however small – not only for a majority, however large – but for each of us’ to the greatest extent possible within flexible constitutional limits.287
First, the statute must have a secular legislative purpose; second, its primary or principal effect must be one that neither advances nor inhibits religion; x x x finally, the statute must not foster ‘an excessive entanglement with religion.288
As James Brundage has pointed out, the immediate source of influence on Christian writers was the pagan Stoics, whose high ideals for morality challenged the Christians to copy them or even do better. Natural law or the law of nature was the basis for these ideals. The famous Stoic jurist Ulpian supplied to Christian writers their understanding of natural law. For Ulpian, natural law consisted in the laws of nature that animals and humans had in common. Among the domestic animals with which Ulpian was familiar, the female accepted the male only when she was in heat. So it was the law of nature for humans and animals alike that sexual intercourse should only take place for breeding.296 (Emphasis supplied)
Nervous prelates in Rome felt that the pill was just an excuse to jettison the Vatican’s position on birth control, which was resented and under siege. The euphoria over new freedoms was part of the social giddiness that characterized the 1960s, in the church as in the secular world. It was a time of the sexual revolution, feminism, and new attitudes toward authority. In this atmosphere, the papal pronouncements about natural law were brought under closer scrutiny by natural reason, and they grew flimsier with every look. There was great fear in the Curia of the Vatican that this mood would invade the Council Pope John was assembling (as, in fact, it did). The whole matter of birth control was considered especially endangered, and it would be fought over strenuously in two Roman arenas, one open and one Secret. The former battle, carried on in the sessions of the Vatican Council, reached a kind of stalemate in the conciliar decree on the church in the modern world, Gaudiumet et Spes. The other battle, waged in secret by the Pope’s own special commission, led to that commission’s stunning defeat by the Pope’s own encyclical Humanae Vitae.302 (Emphasis supplied)Humanae Vitae
That Pontifical Commission met five times, at first in the fall of 1963 – six men convening at Louvain. The second meeting (like all subsequent ones) was in Rome, in the spring of 1964, attended by the thirteen men. The number was increased to fifteen for a meeting that summer. Up to this point, no one had presumed to recommend altering the church’s teaching on contraception. Things changed at the fourth session, held in the spring of 1965, when the size of the commission jumped up to fifty– eight, with five women among the thirty–four lay members. An expert called in for consultation was John T. Noonan, from Notre Dame in Indiana, whose study of the church’s changing positions on usury had won scholarly acclaim. He was working on a similar study of changes in the prohibition of contraception – a book that would appear just as the commission was disbanded. Noonan opened the members' eyes to the way that noninfallible papal teaching can develop.
Another eye opener was the result of a questionnaire brought to Rome by the lay couple Pat and Patty Crowley. They had long been active in the international Christian Family Movement, and they had surveyed their members – devout Catholics all – on their experience of the rhythm method of contraception. They found it far from natural– Since a woman’s period fluctuates with her health, anxieties, age, and other influences, establishing the actual infertile period in any cycle required daily charting of her temperature and close comparative reading of calendars – and even then the results were not Sure. The most conscientious catholics, who followed this nervous procedure with precision, found that it was not certain – which left them in great fear until the next menstruation (which might not occur). And in this concentration on the wife’s physical conditions, her psychological patterns – of fondness, need, crises, travel – had to be ignored or repressed. The comments of the couples surveyed made riveting reading in the commission. A husband, a scholar, wrote:Rhythm destroys the meaning of sex act; it turns it from a spontaneous expression of spiritual and physical love into a mere bodily sexual relief; it makes me obsessed with sex throughout the month; it seriously endangers my chastity; it has a noticeable effect upon my disposition toward my wife and children; it makes necessary my complete avoidance toward my wife for three weeks at a time. I have watched a magnificent spiritual and physical union dissipate and, due to rhythm, turn into a tense and mutually damaging relationship. Rhythm seems to be immoral and deeply unnatural. It seems to be diabolical.
His wife gave her side of the story:I find myself sullen and resentful of my husband when the time of sexual relations finally arrives. I resent his necessarily guarded affection during the month and I find I cannot respond suddenly. I find, also, that my subconscious and unguarded thoughts are inevitably sexual and time consuming. All this in spite of a great intellectual and emotional companionship and a generally beautiful marriage and home life.
The commission was hearing that rhythm made people obsessed with sex and its mechanics while minority members at the Council were arguing that rhythm allows people to escape the merely animal urges and enjoy the serenity of sexuality transcended. The commission was also hearing from doctors that nature, of course, provides women with their greatest sexual desire at just the fertile time that rhythm marked off bounds.
The combined impact of Noonan’s history and the Crowley’s empirical findings made the commission members – good Catholics all, chosen for their loyalty to the church – look honestly at the “natural law” arguments against contraception and see, with a shock, what flimsy reasoning they had accepted. Sex is for procreation, yes – but all the time, at each and every act? Eating is for subsistence. But any food or drink beyond that necessary for sheer subsistence is not considered mortally sinful. In fact, to reduce to that animal compulsion would deny symbolic and spiritual meanings in shared meals – the birthday party, the champagne victory dinner, the wine at Cana, the Eucharist itself. Integrity of the act? Is it sinful to be nourished intravenously when that is called for? Does that violate the integrity of the eating act? The more assembled members looked at the inherited “wisdom” of the church, the more they saw the questionable roots from which it grew – the fear and hatred of sex, the feeling that pleasure in it is a biological bribe to guarantee the race’s perpetuation, that any use of pleasure beyond that purpose is shameful. This was not a view derived from scripture or from Christ, but from Seneca and Augustine.
The commission members, even trained theologians and spiritual counselors who had spent years expounding the church teachings, felt they were looking at reality for the first time. A cultivated submission to the papacy had been, for them, a structure of deceit, keeping them from honesty with themselves, letting them live within a lie. To their shared surprise they found they were not only willing to entertain the idea of the church’s changing, but felt that it had to change on this matter, that the truth, once seen, could no longer be denied. When the nineteen theologians on the commission, convened for a separate vote, were asked whether church teaching could change on contraception, twelve said yes, seven no (including John Ford, who had joined the commission at this meeting).
This set off alarm bells in the Vatican. For the next meeting, the last and the longest, from April to June of 1965, the members of the commission were demoted to “advisers” (periti) and the commission itself was constituted of sixteen bishops brought in to issue the final report. They would listen to those who had done the actual conferring, and theirs would be the final verdict. Debate before them would be presided over by Cardinal Ottaviani of the Holy Office. This bringing in the big guns would have cowed the members in their first sessions. But things had gone too far for such intimidation now. The Crowleys brought another survey with them to the showdown, this one of 3,000 Catholics – including 290 devout subscribers to the magazine St. Anthony’s Messenger – of whom 63 percent said that rhythm had harmed their marriage and 65 percent said that it did not actually prevent conception, even when the right procedures were followed exactly (even neurotically). Dr. Albert Gorres spoke of the self– censorship Catholics had exercised over themselves – something the members recognized in their lives when it was pointed out. The Jesuit priest Josef Fuchs, who had taught Casti Connubii standards for twenty years, said he was withdrawing his moral textbook and resigning his teaching post at the Gregorian University in Rome now that he could no longer uphold what he was asked to profess. The vote of the theologians who were presenting their findings to the bishops was now fifteen to four against the claim that conception is intrinsically evil. The vote of the larger group was thirty to five.
Here was a perfect laboratory test of the idea that contraception is against nature, as that can be perceived by natural reason alone. These people were all educated, even expert. They were Catholics in good standing (they had been chosen on those grounds). They had been conditioned all their lives to accept the church’s teaching – in fact they had accepted it in the past. They of all people would entertain the official case with open minds. They had no malice against church authorities – most of them had devoted much (if not all) of their lives to working with them. Most had entered the project either agreeing with the papal position or thinking that it was unlikely to change. Now they found themselves agreeing that change was not only necessary but inevitable. They had trouble imagining how they had ever thought otherwise. Cardinal Suenens explained how they had been conditioned to have a double consciousness, to live a lie:For years theologians have had to come up with arguments on behalf of a doctrine they were not allowed to contradict. They had an obligation to defend the received doctrine, but my guess is they already had many hesitations about it inside. As soon as the question was opened up a little, a whole group of moralists arrived at the position defended by the majority here. . . The bishops defended the classical position, but it was imposed on them by authority. The bishops didn't study the pros and cons. The received directives, they bowed to them, and they tried to explain them to their congregations.
As soon as people began to think independently about the matter, the whole structure of deceit crumbled at the touch. The past position could not be sustained, even among these people picked by the Vatican itself, much less among Catholics not as committed as these were. And it was absurd to speak of the non–Catholic world as ever recognizing this “natural law of natural reason.”
The need to face the prospect of change was impressed on the people in the commission by the arguments of the five theologians defending Casti Connubii. They reduced their own case to absurdities. John Ford said that intercourse is not necessary for marital love: “Conjugal love is above all spiritual (if the love is genuine) and it requires no specific carnal gesture, much less its repetition in some determined frequency.” Ford also liked to say that, if the teaching on sexual activity only for procreation were changed, people could rnasturbate with impunity. Dr. Gorres quoted the Melchite Patriarch, Maximos IV, who said in the Council deliberations that priests display a “celibate psychosis” in the area of sex. ***
The climactic vote of the commission – the one of the sixteen bishops – was nine to three for changing the church’s position on contraception, with three abstentions. An agreement had been reached before the vote was taken to submit only one report for the commission, but Cardinal Ottaviani and Father Ford, seeing how things were going, had prepared a document of their own, which would later be misrepresented as an official minority document. There was only one official document, the sole one voted on by the bishops who had authority to report the body’s findings. (Ottaviani was the one who had brought in these officials, hoping to get the result he wanted. When he failed to, he ignored his own device.)
The Ford “report”, drawn up with Germain Grisez, said that any change was inconceivable. This was not because there were rational arguments against change: “If we could bring forward arguments which are clear and cogent based on reason alone, it would not be necessary for our Commission to exist, nor would the present state of affairs exist in the church.” No, the real reason to keep the teaching was that it was the teaching: “The Church could not have erred though so many centuries, even through one century, by imposing under serious obligations very grave burdens the name of Jesus Christ, if Jesus Christ did not actually impose these burdens.” As a priest had put it in earlier debate, if the church sent all those souls to hell, it must keep maintaining that that is where they are.
This was not an argument that made sense, at this point, to the commission – to bishops any more than to the theologians or lay experts. But it was the one argument that, in the end, mattered to Paul VI. He took advantage of the so–called “minority report” to say that he could not accept the commission’s findings since there had been disagreement with it. Nine of the twelve bishops, fifteen of the nineteen theologians, and thirty of the thirty–five nonepiscopal members of the commission were not enough for him. Votes on the decrees in the Council had not been unanimous either, but he did not call them invalid for that reason. Paul’s real concern was with the arguments that Ottaviani brought to him after the report was submitted. He knew what was worrying the Pope, and could play on that. F.X. Murphy had observed one thing about Paul’s behavior throughout the meetings of the Council:The Pope was a man obviously torn by doubts, tormented by scruples, haunted by thoughts of perfection, and above all dominated by an exaggerated concern – some called it an obsession – about the prestige of his office as Pope. His remarks on this score at times displayed an almost messianic fervor, a note missing in the more sedate utterances of his predecessors. His innumerable statements on the subject were made on almost every occasion, from casual week–day audiences of Sunday sermons from the window of his apartment to the most solemn gatherings in season and out of season. Since it was part of the strategy of the [conciliar] minority to accuse the majority of disloyalty toward the Holy Father' Paul’s constant harping–in inevitably caused the majority to think that he perhaps did share these misgivings, at least to a certain extent. It was noticed by students of Paul’s remarks that while he showed an open– mindedness about almost any other subject, on the single theme of the papacy his mind remained strangely closed to analysis.Those words were written before Humanae Vitae was issued, but they explain the letter entirely.
The commission members left their work convinced that the pope could no longer uphold a discredited teaching. When the report was leaked to the press, Catholics around the world took heart at the signs of change. So far from upsetting their faith, as the Pope feared, it heartened them. What would unsettle their faith was what Paul did next – issue Humanae Vitae, with its reiteration of Casti Connubii’s ban: ('The church, calling men back to the observance of the natural law, as interpreted by its constant doctrine, teaches that each and every marriage act must remain open to the transmission of life.” Catholics responded with an unparalleled refusal to submit. Polls registered an instant noncompliance with the encyclical. At a previously scheduled Catholic festival of devout young Germans at Essen, a resolution that those attending could not obey the encyclical passed through a crowd of four thousand with only ninety opposing votes. A simultaneous poll among German Catholics at large found that 68 percent of them thought the Pope was wrong on contraception. Similar findings rolled in from around the world.
What were bishops to do? The encyclical itself had ordered them to explain and enforce the Pope’s decision, along with all priests:Be the first to give, in the exercise of your ministry, the example of loyal internal and external obedience to the teaching authority of the Church. . . it is of the utmost importance, for peace, of consciences and for the unity of the Christian People, that in the field of morals as well as in that of dogma, all should attend to the magisterium of the Church, and all should speak the same language.
But for the first time in memory, bishop’s statements, while showing respect for the encyclical, told believers they could act apart from it if they felt bound by conscience to do so. The assembly of bishops in the Netherlands put it most bluntly: “The assembly considers that the encyclical’s total rejection of contraceptive methods is not convincing on the basis of the arguments put forward.” other Episcopal panels were more circumspect, but signaled that they would not consider those disobedient to the encyclical to be separating themselves from the sacraments. The Belgian bishops put it this way: “Someone, however, who is competent in the matter under consideration and capable of forming a personal and well–founded judgment – which necessarily presupposes a sufficient amount of knowledge – may, after serious examination before God, come to other conclusions on certain points.” In other words: do not treat the Pope’s words lightly, but follow your conscience after taking a serious look at them. That was the position taken by bishops in the United States ("the norms of licit dissent come into play” ), Austria, Brazil, Czechoslovakia, Mexico, [] West Germany, Japan, France, Scandinavia, and Switzerland. The Scandinavian statement was typical:Should someone, however, for grave and carefully considered reasons, not feel able to subscribe to the arguments of the encyclical, he is entitled, as has been constantly acknowledged, to entertain other views than those put forward in a non–infallible declaration of the Church. No one should, therefore, on account of such diverging opinions along, be regarded as an inferior Catholic.
The Pope was stunned. He would spend the remaining ten years of his pontificate as if sleepwalking, unable to understand what had happened to him, why such open dissent was entertained at the very top of the episcopate. Four years after the publication of Humanae Vitae, when the Pope looked “cautious, nervous, anxious, alarmed,” he deplored the defiance of church teaching in a sermon at Saint Peter’s, and this was the only explanation he could come up with for the defiance: “Through some crack in the temple of God, the smoke of Satan has entered'” He was increasingly melancholy and prone to tears. Had he opened that crack in the temple of God? Even as a nagging suspicion this was a terrible burden to bear. It explains the atmosphere of darkening tragedy that hung about his final years. He would not issue another encyclical in all those ten years. He was a prisoner of the Vatican in a way that went beyond his predecessors' confinement there. He was imprisoned in its structures of deceit. Meanwhile, Father Ford, who had assisted his fellow Jesuit Gustave Martelet in drawing up Humanae Vitae under Cardinal Ottaviani’s direction, went back to the seminary where he had taught moral theology for years and found that the Jesuit seminarians their refused to take his classes, since they knew from others in the Order what he had done in Rome. As a result of what he considered his life’s great coup, his teaching career was over.303 (Emphasis supplied)
SEC 23. Prohibited Acts. – The following acts are prohibited:
(a) Any health care service provider, whether public or private, who shall:
x x x x
(2) Refuse to perform legal and medically–safe reproductive health procedures on any person of legal age on the ground of lack of consent or authorization of the following persons in the following instances:
(i) Spousal consent in case of married persons: Provided, That in case of disagreement, the decision of the one undergoing the procedure shall prevail; and
SEC. 7. Access to Family Planning – x x x
No person shall be denied information and access to family planning services, whether natural or artificial: Provided, That minors will not be allowed access to modern methods of family planning without written consent from their parents or guardian/s except when the minor is already a parent or has had a miscarriage.
The Family
Section 1. The State recognizes the Filipino family as the foundation of the nation. Accordingly, it shall strengthen its solidarity and actively promote its total development.
Section 2. Marriage, as an inviolable social institution, is the foundation of the family and shall be protected by the State.
Section 3. The State shall defend:
(1) The right of spouses to found a family in accordance with their religious convictions and the demands of responsible parenthood;
(2) The right of children to assistance, including proper care and nutrition, and special protection from all forms of neglect, abuse, cruelty, exploitation, and other conditions prejudicial to their development;
(3) The right of the family to a family living wage and income; and
(4) The right of families or family associations to participate in the planning and implementation of policies and programs that affect them.
The Griswold case invalidated a Connecticut statute which made the use of contraceptives a criminal offense on the ground of its amounting to an unconstitutional invasion of the right of privacy of married persons; rightfully it stressed ‘a relationship lying within the zone of privacy created by several fundamental constitutional guarantees’. So it is likewise in our jurisdiction. The right to privacy as such is accorded recognition independently of its identification with liberty; in itself, it is fully deserving of constitutional protection. The language of Prof. Emerson is particularly apt: ‘The concept of limited government has always included the idea that governmental powers stop short of certain intrusions into the personal life of the citizen. This is indeed one of the basic distinctions between absolute and limited government. Ultimate and pervasive control of the individual, in all aspects of his life, is the hallmark of the absolute state. In contrast, a system of limited government safeguards a private sector, which belongs to the individual, firmly distinguishing it from the public sector, which the state can control Protection of this private sector – protection, in other words, of the dignity and integrity of the individual – has become increasingly important as modern society has developed. All the forces of a technological age – industrialization, urbanization, and organization – operate to narrow the area of privacy and facilitate intrusions into it. In modern terms, the capacity to maintain and support this enclave of private life marks the difference between a democratic and a totalitarian society.’311 (Emphasis supplied)
Section 1. No person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, nor shall any person be denied the equal protection of the laws.
Section 9. The State shall promote a just and dynamic social order that will ensure the prosperity and independence of the nation and free the people from poverty through policies that provide adequate social services, promote full employment, a rising standard of living, and an improved quality of life for all.
Section 11. The State values the dignity of every human person and guarantees full respect for human rights. (Emphasis supplied)
Section 14. The State recognizes the role of women in nation–building, and shall ensure the fundamental equality before the law of women and men. (Emphasis supplied)
Equally deplorable is the debarment of parental consent in cases where the minor, who would be undergoing a procedure, is already a parent or has had a miscarriage. x x x
x x x x
There can be no other interpretation of this provision except that when a minor is already a parent or has had a miscarriage, the parents are excluded from the decision making process of the minor with regard to family planning. Even if she is not yet emancipated, the parental authority is already cut off just because there is a need to tame population growth.
x x x x
To insist on a rule that interferes with the right of parents to exercise parental control over their minor–child or the right of the spouses to mutually decide on matters which very well affect the very purpose of marriage, that is, the establishment of conjugal and family life, would result in the violation of one’s privacy with respect to his family. It would be dismissive of the unique and strongly–held Filipino tradition of maintaining close family ties and violative of the recognition the State affords couples entering into the special contract of marriage [that they act] as one unit in forming the foundation of the family and society.314
[t]here exists no substantial distinction as between a minor who is already a parent or has had a miscarriage. There is no cogent reason to require a written parental consent for a minor who seeks access to modern family planning methods and dispense with such requirement if the minor is already a parent or has had a miscarriage. Under the Family Code, all minors, generally, regardless of his/her circumstances, are still covered by the parental authority exercised by their parents. That a minor who is already a parent or has had a miscarriage does not operate to divest his/her parents of their parental authority; such circumstances do not emancipate a minor.315
x x x avoid ruling on constitutional questions and to presume that the acts of the political departments are valid in the absence of a clear and unmistakable showing to the contrary. To doubt is to sustain. This presumption is based on the doctrine of separation of powers which enjoins upon each department a becoming respect for the acts of the other departments. The theory is that as the joint act of Congress and the President of the Philippines, a law has been carefully studied and determined to be in accordance with the fundamental law before it was finally enacted.318
The 1987 Constitution molded an even stronger and more independent judiciary. Among others, it enhanced the rule making power of this Court. Its Section 5(5), Article VIII, provides:xxx xxx xxx “Section 5. The Supreme Court shall have the following powers:xxx xxx xxx
(5) Promulgate rules concerning the protection and enforcement of constitutional rights, pleading, practice and procedure in all courts, the admission to the practice of law, the Integrated Bar, and legal assistance to the underprivileged. Such rules shall provide a simplified and inexpensive procedure for the speedy disposition of cases, shall be uniform for all courts of the same grade, and shall not diminish, increase, or modify substantive rights. Rules of procedure of special courts and quasi–judicial bodies shall remain effective unless disapproved by the Supreme Court.”
The rule making power of this Court was expanded. This Court for the first time was given the power to promulgate rules concerning the protection and enforcement of constitutional rights. The Court was also granted for the first time the power to disapprove rules of procedure of special courts and quasi–judicial bodies. x x x321
Viewed in light of the broad power of the Court to issue rules for the protection and enforcement of constitutional rights, the power to disapprove the rules of procedure of quasi–judicial bodies is significant in that it implies the power of the Court to look into the sufficiency of such rules of procedure insofar as they adequately protect and enforce constitutional right. Moreover, the power to disapprove the aforesaid rules of procedure necessarily includes or implies the power to approve or modify such rules or, on the one extreme, require that such rules of procedure be issued when necessary to protect and enforce constitutional rights. In other words, within and between the broader power to issue rules for the protection and enforcement of constitutional rights and the narrower power to disapprove the rules of procedure of quasi–judicial bodies, there exists penumbras of the power that the Court may exercise in order to protect and enforce constitutional rights.
x x x x
Taken together [with Article VIII, Section 1 of the Constitution], the expanded jurisdiction of the Court and the power to issue rules for the protection and enforcement of constitutional rights provide the bases for the Court (1) to look into the sufficiency of safeguards in the implementation of the RH Law insofar as it will adversely affect the right to life of the unborn, and (2) to issue such orders as are necessary and essential in order to protect and enforce the constitutional right to life of the unborn. x x x322 (Emphasis supplied)
(1) directing the FDA to formulate the rules of procedure in the screening, evaluation and approval of all contraceptives that will be used under the RH Law; (2) the rules of procedure shall contain the following minimum requirements of due process: (a) publication, notice and hearing, (b) the Solicitor General shall be mandated to represent the unborn and the State’s interest in the protection of the life of the unborn, (c) interested parties shall be allowed to intervene, (d)the standard laid down in the Constitution, as adopted under the RH Law, as to what constitute allowable contraceptives shall be strictly followed, i.e., those which do not harm or destroy the life of the unborn from conception/fertilization,
(e)in weighing the evidence, all reasonable doubts shall be resolved in favour of the right to life of the unborn from conception/fertilization, and
(f) the other requirements of administrative due process, as summarized in Ang Tibay, shall be complied with.
The FDA should be directed to submit these rules of procedure within 30 days from receipt of the Court’s decision, for the Court’s appropriate action.323
x x x But most importantly, the 1987 Constitution took away the power of the Congress to repeal, alter, or supplement rules concerning pleading, practice and procedure. In fine, the power to promulgate rules of pleading, practice and procedure is no longer shared by this Court with the Congress, more so with the Executive. If the manifest intent of the 1987 Constitution is to strengthen the independence of the judiciary, it is inutile to urge, as public respondents do, that this Court has no jurisdiction to control the process of execution of its decisions, a power conceded to it and which it has exercised since time immemorial.
To be sure, it is too late in the day for public respondents to assail the jurisdiction of this Court to control and supervise the implementation of its decision in the case at bar. x x x324 (Emphasis supplied)
Section 5. The Supreme Court shall have the following powers:
x x x x
5. Promulgate rules concerning the protection and enforcement of constitutional rights, pleading, practice, and procedure in all courts, the admission to the practice of law, the integrated bar, and legal assistance to the under–privileged. Such rules shall provide a simplified and inexpensive procedure for the speedy disposition of cases, shall be uniform for all courts of the same grade, and shall not diminish, increase, or modify substantive rights. Rules of procedure of special courts and quasi–judicial bodies shall remain effective unless disapproved by the Supreme Court. (Emphasis supplied)
Endnotes:
1 See P. A. Freund, Mr. Justice Brandeis, in On Law and Justice 119, 140 (1968) and A. M. Bickel, THE LEAST DANGEROUS BRANCH 71 (1962), as cited by V. V. Mendoza, JUDICIAL REVIEW OF CONSTITUTIONAL QUESTIONS: CASES AND MATERIALS 91 (2004).
2 See Southern Hemisphere Engagement Network, Inc. v. Anti–Terrorism Council, G.R. No. 178552, October 5, 2010, 632 SCRA 146, 166 [Per J. Carpio–Morales, En Banc].
3 See Angara v. Electoral Commission, 63 Phil. 139, 158 (1936) [Per J. Laurel, En Banc]; See also Sec. Guingona, Jr. v. Court of Appeals, 354 Phil. 415, 429 (1998) [Per J. Panganiban, First Division].
4 See the separate opinion of J. Mendoza in Cruz v. Sec. of Environment and Natural Resources, 400 Phil. 904, 1092 (2002) [Per Curiam, En Banc]; See the concurring opinion of J. Mendoza in Estrada v. Sandiganbayan, 421 Phil. 290, 430–432 (2001) [Per J. Bellosillo, En Banc], citing Gooding v. Wilson, 405 U.S. 518, 521, 31 L.Ed.2d 408, 413 (1972); Southern Hemisphere Engagement Network, Inc. v. Anti–Terrorism Council, G.R. No. 178552, October 5, 2010, 632 SCRA 146 [Per J. Carpio–Morales, En Banc].
5 Imbong et al. petition, rollo (G.R. No. 204819), vol. 1, p. 5; Serve Life CDO Inc. petition, rollo (G.R. No. 204988), vol. 1, p.8.
6 Task Force for Family and Life petition, rollo (G.R. No. 204957), vol. 1, p. 6.
7 Alliance for the Family Foundation petition, rollo (G.R. No. 204934), vol. 1, p. 9; Tatad et al., petition, rollo (G.R. No. 205491), vol. p. 4.
8 De Venecia et al., comment–in–intervention, rollo (G.R. No. 205491), vol. 1, p. 370; C4RH motion to intervene, rollo (G.R. no. 204934), vol. 1, p.849.
9 See for example petitions in G.R. No. 204988 by Serve Life CDO, Inc., et al.; G.R. No. 205003 by Expedito A. Bugarin; G.R. No. 205491 by Francisco Tatad et al.; G.R. No. 205720 by Pro–Life Philippines Foundation, Inc.; and G.R. No. 205355 by Millennium Saint Foundation, Inc. et al.
10People v. Vera, 65 Phil. 56 (1937).
11 Id.
12 Republic Act No. 10354, Sections 2(d), 3(d), 3(e), 3(j).
13See J. Carpio’s concurring opinion, p. 3.
14See 1986 Records of the Constitutional Commission No. 32, Vol. 1, July 17, 1986; No. 81, Vol. IV, September 12, 1986; No. 84, Vol. IV, September 16, 1986; No. 85, Vol. IV, September 17, 1986; No. 87, Vol. IV, September 19, 1986.
15E.g. That the beginning of life is already settled in the medical community; That a chromosome count of 46 can only be found in humans; That the situations when moral dilemma exists are few.
16 (Ectopic pregnancy occurs when the fertilized egg implants into parts or organs other than the uterus.) See The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologiests, Frequently Asked Questions, FAQ155: Pregnancy, http://www.acog.org/~/media/For%20Patients/faq155.pdf?dmc=1&ts=20140323T2143090835 accessed on March 24, 2014; See Obstetrics and Gynecology by Charls RB Beckman, et al. 7th ed. Published by Wolters Kluwer, accessed through https://www.inkling.com/read/obstetrics–gynecology–beckmann–7th/chapter–19/ectopic–pregnancy on March 27, 2014; See In Vitro Fertilization: The A.R.T.* of Making Babies (*Assisted Reproductive Technology) by Sher Geoffrey, et al. Skyhouse Publishing 4th Ed. 2013, Chapter 2, p. 33.
17 E.g. pre–eclampsia, seizures, liver or kidney complications.
18 (Assisted reproductive technologies (ART) refer to “all fertility treatments in which both eggs and sperm are handles. In general, ART procedures involve surgically removing eggs from a woman’s ovaries, combining them with sperm in the laboratory, and returning them to the woman’s body or donating them to another woman. They do NOT include treatments in which only sperm are handled (i.e. intrauterine—or artificial—insemination) or procedures in which a woman takes medicine only to stimulate egg production without the intention of having eggs retrieved.”) See Center for Disease Control and Prevention, What is Assisted Reproductive Technology http: www.cdc.gov=” ” art=” " (visited March 24, 2014).
19See E. Peñalver, The Concept of Religion, 107 Yale L.J. 791, 803 (1997).
20See De Venecia et al. comment–in–intervention, rollo (G.R. No. 205491), vol. 1, p. 375–376 citing G. Wills, PAPAL SIN: STRUCTURES OF DECEIT (2001).
21See Declaration of Geneva (1948). Adopted by the General Assembly of World Medical Association at Geneva Switzerland, September 1948. (The Philippine Medical Association is a member of the World Medical Association.) http: www.wma.net=” ” en=” ” 60about=” ” 10members=” ” 21memberlist=” ” index.html?letter="P#Philippines" (visited April 4, 2014); See also Hippocratic Oath, available at https: www.philippinemedicalassociation.org=” ” downloads=” ” pma–codes=” ” hippocratic–oath.pdf=” " (visited April 4, 2014).
22 Republic Act No. 10354, Section 23 (a)(2)(i).
23 Ponencia, pp. 76–81.
24 Constitution, Article II, section 14. The State recognizes the role of women in nation–building, and shall ensure the fundamental equality before the law of women and men.
25 See Office of the Solicitor General, consolidated comment, rollo (G.R. No. 205491), vol. 1, pp. 153 and 158.
26 Angara v. Electoral Commission, 63 Phil. 139, 158 (1936) [Per J. Laurel, En Banc]. See also Dumlao v. Commission on Elections, 184 Phil. 369, 377 (1980) [Per J. Melencio–Herrera, En Banc], where this court held that “[i]t is basic that the power of judicial review is limited to the determination of actual cases and controversies.”
27 Ponencia, p. 28.
28 Id.
29Joya v. Presidential Commission on Good Government, G.R. No. 96541, August 24, 1993, 225 SCRA 568, 579 [Per J. Bellosillo, En Banc]; See also Republic Telecommunications Holdings, Inc. v. Santiago, 556 Phil. 83, 91–92 (2007) [Per J. Tinga, Second Division].
30David v. Macapagal–Arroyo, 522 Phil. 705, 753 (2006) [Per J. Sandoval–Gutierrez, En Banc].
31 See V. V. MENDOZA, JUDICIAL REVIEW OF CONSTITUTIONAL QUESTIONS: CASES AND MATERIALS 87 (2004).
32 G.R. No. 183591, October 14, 2008, 568 SCRA 402 [Per J. Carpio–Morales, En Banc].
33 Id. at 443–449.
34 Id. at 450.
35 Id. at 518.
36 Ponencia, p. 28.
37 See CONSTITUTION, Article VIII, section 1.
38 See Sana v. Career Executive Service Board, G.R. No. 192926, November 15, 2011, 660 SCRA 130, 138 [Per J. Carpio, En Banc] where the ponencia dismissed the petition for being moot and academic and characterized the North Cotabato case as an instance where this court relaxed the actual case or controversy requirement to review moot and academic issues.
39 602 Phil. 64 (2009) [Per J. Brion, En Banc].
40 Section 19. Start of Full Deregulation. – Full deregulation of the Industry shall start five (5) months following the effectivity of this Act: Provided, however, That when the public interest so requires, the President may accelerate the start of full deregulation upon the recommendation of the DOE and the Department of Finance when the prices of crude oil and petroleum products in the world market are declining and the value of the peso in relation to the US dollar is stable, taking into account the relevant trends and prospects: Provided, further, That the foregoing provisions notwithstanding, the five (5)–month Transition Phase shall continue to apply to LPG, regular gasoline, and kerosene as socially–sensitive petroleum products and said petroleum products shall be covered by the automatic pricing mechanism during the said period.
Upon the implementation of full deregulation as provided herein, the Transition Phase is deemed terminated and the following laws are repealed:
(a) Republic Act No. 6173, as amended;
(b) Section 5 of Executive Order No. 172, as amended;
(c) Letter of Instruction No. 1431, dated October 15, 1984;
(d) Letter of Instruction No. 1441, dated November 15, 1984;
(e) Letter of Instruction No. 1460, dated May 9, 1985;
(f) Presidential Decree No. 1889; and
(g) Presidential Decree No. 1956, as amended by Executive Order No. 137:
Provided, however, That in case full deregulation is started by the President in exercise of the authority provided in this Section, the foregoing laws shall continue to be in force and effect with respect to LPG, regular gasoline and kerosene for the rest of the five (5)–month period.
41Garcia v. The Executive Secretary, 602 Phil. 64, 75–76 (2009) [Per J. Brion, En Banc].
42 607 Phil. 334 (2009) [Per C. J. Puno, En Banc].
43 Id. at 341. This court likewise denied the petitions for failing to present an actual case or controversy.
44 G.R. No. 178552, October 5, 2010, 632 SCRA 146 [Per J. Carpio–Morales, En Banc] citing Information Technology Foundation of the Philippines v. COMELEC, 499 Phil. 281, 304–305 (2005) [Per J. Panganiban, En Banc].
45 Id. at 175–177.
46 G.R. No. 186613, August 27, 2013, 703 SCRA 623 [Per J. Perez, En Banc].
47 Id. at 641–643.
48 See Province of North Cotabato v. Government of the Republic of the Philippines Peace Panel on Ancestral Domain (GRP), 589 Phil. 387 (2008) [Per J. Carpio–Morales, En Banc], dissenting opinions of J. Velasco, Jr., and J. Nachura. See also separate opinions of J. Tinga and Chico–Nazario; See also J. Brion’s concurring and dissenting opinion and J. Leonardo–de Castro’s separate concurring and dissenting opinion.
49Province of North Cotabato v. Government of the Republic of the Philippines Peace Panel on Ancestral Domain (GRP), 589 Phil. 387, 646–647 (2008) [Per J. Carpio–Morales, En Banc].
50 Id. at 706–707.
51 Id. at 685–688.
52 CONSTITUTION, Article VIII, section 1, paragraph 2. See Angara v. Electoral Commission, 63 Phil. 139 (1936) [Per J. Laurel, En Banc].
53See V. V. MENDOZA, JUDICIAL REVIEW OF CONSTITUTIONAL QUESTIONS: CASES AND MATERIALS 86 (2004).
54Belgica, et al. v. Executive Secretary, G.R. No. 208566, November 11, 2013 [Per J. Perlas–Bernabe, En Banc].
55Belgica, et al. v. Executive Secretary, G.R. No. 208566, November 11, 2013, J. Leonen’s concurring opinion, pp. 6–7. This case, however, falls under the exception of the actual case requirement due to jurisprudential precedent of patent irregularity of disbursements and a clear, widespread, and pervasive wastage of funds by another branch of government.
56 SEC. 9. The Philippine National Drug Formulary System and Family Planning Supplies. – The National Drug Formulary shall include hormonal contraceptives, intrauterine devices, injectables and other safe, legal, non–abortifacient and effective family planning products and supplies. The Philippine National Drug Formulary System (PNDFS) shall be observed in selecting drugs including family planning supplies that will be included or removed from the Essential Drugs List (EDL) in accordance with existing practice and in consultation with reputable medical associations in the Philippines. For the purpose of this Act, any product or supply included or to be included in the EDL must have a certification from the FDA that said product and supply is made available on the condition that it is not to be used as an abortifacient.
These products and supplies shall also be included in the regular purchase of essential medicines and supplies of all national hospitals: Provided, further, That the foregoing offices shall not purchase or acquire by any means emergency contraceptive pills, postcoital pills, abortifacients that will be used for such purpose and their other forms or equivalent.
57 Ponencia, p. 55.
58 SEC. 14. Age– and Development–Appropriate Reproductive Health Education. – The State shall provide age– and development–appropriate reproductive health education to adolescents which shall be taught by adequately trained teachers informal and nonformal educational system and integrated in relevant subjects such as, but not limited to, values formation; knowledge and skills in self–protection against discrimination; sexual abuse and violence against women and children and other forms of gender based violence and teen pregnancy; physical, social and emotional changes in adolescents; women’s rights and children’s rights; responsible teenage behavior; gender and development; and responsible parenthood: Provided, That flexibility in the formulation and adoption of appropriate course content, scope and methodology in each educational level or group shall be allowed only after consultations with parents–teachers–community associations, school officials and other interest groups. The Department of Education (DepED) shall formulate a curriculum which shall be used by public schools and may be adopted by private schools.
59 Ponencia, pp. 81–82.
60 Ponencia, p. 29.
61 G.R. No. 203335, February 18, 2014 [Per J. Abad, En Banc].
62 J. Leonen, dissenting and concurring opinion, p. 32, G.R. No. 203335, February 18, 2014 [Per J. Abad, En Banc].
63 400 Phil. 904, (2002) [Per Curiam, En Banc].
64 Id. at 1092. J. Mendoza’s separate opinion.
65 421 Phil. 290 (2001) [Per J. Bellosillo, En Banc].
66See the concurring opinion of J. Mendoza in Estrada v. Sandiganbayan, 421 Phil. 290, 430–431 (2001) [Per J. Bellosillo, En Banc], citing Gooding v. Wilson, 405 U.S. 518, 521, 31 L.Ed.2d 408, 413 (1972); United States v. Salerno, 481 U.S. 739, 745, 95 L.Ed.2d 697, 707 (1987); People v. Dela Piedra, 403 Phil. 31 (2001) [Per J. Kapunan, First Division]; Broadrick v. Oklahoma, 413 U.S. 601, 612–613, 37 L. Ed. 2d 830, 840–841 (1973); Village of Hoffman Estates v. Flipside, Hoffman Estates, Inc., 455 U.S. 489, 494–95, 71 L.Ed.2d 362, 369 (1982); United States v. Raines, 362 U.S. 17, 21, 4 L.Ed.2d 524, 529 (1960); Yazoo & Mississippi Valley RR. v. Jackson Vinegar Co., 226 U.S. 217, 57 L.Ed. 193 (1912).
67 522 Phil. 705 (2006) [Per J. Sandoval–Gutierrez, En Banc].
68 Id. at 775–777, citing the concurring opinion of J. Mendoza in Estrada v. Sandiganbayan, 421 Phil. 290, 430–432 (2001) [Per J. Bellosillo, En Banc]; Broadrick v. Oklahoma, 413 U.S. 601 (1973); Younger v. Harris, 401 U.S. 37, 52–53, 27 L.Ed.2d 669, 680 (1971); United States v. Raines, 362 U.S. 17, 4 L.Ed.2d 524 (1960); Board of Trustees, State Univ. of N.Y v. Fox, 492 U.S. 469, 106 L.Ed.2d 388 (1989).
69 479 Phil. 265 (2004) [Per J. Panganiban, En Banc].
70 576 Phil. 357 (2008) [Per J. Chico–Nazario, En Banc].
71 594 Phil. 305 (2008) [Per J. Chico–Nazario, En Banc].
72 Id at 316.
73 G.R. No. 178552, October 5, 2010, 632 SCRA 146 [Per J. Carpio–Morales, En Banc].
74 Id. at 186–187, citing Prof. David v. Pres. Macapagal–Arroyo, 522 Phil. 705 (2006) [Per J. Sandoval–Gutierrez, En Banc]; Spouses Romualdez v. Commission on Elections, 576 Phil. 357 (2008) [Per J. Chico–Nazario, En Banc]; Estrada v. Sandiganbayan, 421 Phil. 290 (2001) [Per J. Bellosillo, En Banc]; Constitution, Article III, section 4; People v. Siton, 600 SCRA 476, 485 (2009) [Per J. Ynares–Santiago, En Banc]; Virginia v. Hicks, 539 U.S. 113, 156 L. Ed. 2d 148 (2003); Gooding v. Wilson, 405 U.S. 518, 31 L. Ed 2d 408 (1972).
75 J. Leonen, dissenting and concurring opinion, p. 38, Disini v. Secretary of Justice, G.R. No. 203335, February 18, 2014 [Per J. Abad, En Banc].
76 Id.
77 Rules of Court, rule 3, section 12, which provides: “Class Suit. – When the subject matter of the controversy is one of common or general interest to many persons so numerous that it is impracticable to join all as parties, a number of them which the court finds to be sufficiently numerous and representative as to fully protect the interests of all concerned may sue or defend for the benefit of all. Any party in interest shall have the right to intervene to protect his individual interest.”
78 Rules of Court, rule 3, section 12.
79 G.R. No. 4695, 12 Phil. 227 (1908) [Per J. Willard, En Banc].
80 Id.
81 Id. at 240–241.
82 157 Phil. 551 (1974) [Per J. Zaldivar, Second Division].
83 Id. at 564–569, citing Niembra v. The Director of Lands, 120 Phil. 509 (1964) [Per J. Labrador, En Banc].
84 A. M. No. 88–1–646–0, March 3, 1988, 159 SCRA 623 [En Banc, Unsigned Resolution].
85 Id. at 623.
86 Rules of Court, rule 3, section 12.
87 Rules of Court, rule 3, section 6.
88 A. M. No. 88–1–646–0, March 3, 1988, 159 SCRA 623, 623 [En Banc, Unsigned Resolution].
89 Id. at 630.
90 Id. at 627, 629–630.
91Bulig–bulig Kita Kamaganak Association v. Sulpicio Lines, Inc. G.R. No. 84750, May 19, 1989, 173 SCRA 514 [En Banc, Unsigned Resolution].
92 Id. at 515.
93See for example Francisco Jr. v. The House of Representatives, 460 Phil. 830 (2003). (This case discussed that “[w]here it clearly appears that not all interests can be sufficiently represented as shown by the divergent issues raised in the numerous petitions before this Court, G.R. No. 160365 as a class suit ought to fail.”)
94 444 Phil 230 (2004) [Per J. Bellosillo, En Banc].
95 Id. at 257–258. Justice Mendoza concurred in the result. Justices Carpio and Austria–Martinez dissented. Justices Panganiban and Carpio–Morales joined Justice Carpio, while Justice Azcuna joined Justice Austria Martinez. Citations omitted.
96 Petition docketed as G.R. No. 204819.
97 Imbong, et al. petition, rollo (G.R. No. 204819), vol. 1, p. 5.
98 Id.
99 Petition docketed as G.R. No. 20934.
100 Alliance for the Family Foundation, Inc. petition, rollo (G.R. No. 20934), vol. 1, p. 9.
101 G.R. No. 101083, July 30, 1993, 224 SCRA 792 [Per J. Davide, Jr., En Banc].
102 Id. at 802–803.
103 Petition docketed as G.R. No. 204957.
104 Task Force for Family and Life Visayas, Inc. amended petition, rollo (G.R. No. 204957), pp. 44–45.
105 Id. at 45.
106 Id.
107 Petition docketed as G.R. No. 204988.
108 Serve Life CDO Inc. petition, rollo (G.R. No. 204988), p. 8.
109 Id.
110 Petition docketed as G.R. No. 205491.
111 Tatad et al. petition, rollo (G.R. No. 205491), vol. 1, p. 4.
112 Petition docketed as G.R. No. 207172.
113 Couples for Christ petition, rollo (G.R. No. 207172), vol. 1,, p. 11.
114 Petition docketed as G.R. No. 205720.
115 Pro–Life Philippines Foundation et al. petition, rollo (G.R. No. 205720), vol. 1, p. 5.
116 Id.
117 G.R. No. 204988 by Serve Life CDO, Inc., et al.; G.R. No. 205003 by Expedito A. Bugarin; G.R. No. 205491 by Francisco Tatad et al.; G.R. No. 205720 by Pro–Life Philippines Foundation, Inc.; and G.R. No. 205355 by Millennium Saint Foundation, Inc., et al.
118David v. Macapagal–Arroyo, 522 Phil. 705, 763–764 (2006) [Per J. Sandoval–Gutierrez, En Banc].
119See J. Leonen concurring opinion in Belgica, et al. v. Executive Secretary, G.R. No. 208566, November 11, 2013 [Per J. Perlas–Bernabe, En Banc].
120 Constitution, Article XI, section 2.
121See Estrada v. Desierto, 408 Phil. 194 (2001) [Per J. Puno, En Banc], cited in Rodriguez v. Macapagal–Arroyo, G.R. No. 191805, November 15, 2011, 660 SCRA 84. See also J. Leonen concurring opinion in Belgica, et al. v. Executive Secretary, G.R. No. 208566, November 11, 2013 [Per J. Perlas–Bernabe, En Banc].
122 Declaration of policy.
123 Guiding Principles of Implementation.
124 The Philippine National Drug Formulary System and Family Planning Supplies.
125 Ponencia, p. 48.
126 Id.
127 Id.
128 G.R. No. 83896, February 22, 1991, 194 SCRA 317, [En Banc, per Fernando, C.J., Narvasa, Melencio–Herrera, Gutierrez, Jr., Cruz, Feliciano, Gancayco, Padilla, Bidin, Medialdea, Regalado and Davide, Jr., JJ., concur; Paras, J., x x x concur because cabinet members like the members of the Supreme Court are not supermen; Sarmiento and Grino–Aquino, JJ., No part].
129 Id. at 325.
130 Id. at 337–338.
131 Id.
132 CONSTITUTION, Article II, section 1.
133 (The right to life provision in Article II, Section 12 of the Constitution was initially intended to be part of Section 1 of the Bill of Rights, such that the provision reads: Section 1. No person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law, nor shall any person be denied the equal protection of the laws. The right to life extends to the fertilized ovum.) See RCC NO. 32, Vol. 1, July 17, 1986.
134 (Final provision is changed to “from conception.”)
135 RCC No. 32, Vol. 1, July 17, 1986.
136 Id.
137 Id.
138 RCC No. 32, Vol. 1, July 17, 1986.
* Corrected. Earlier version had an erratum.
139 RCC No. 85, Vol. 4, September 17, 1986.
140 Id.
141 C. Cameron and R. Williamson, In the world of Dolly, when does a human embryo acquire respect? J Med Ethics 31, 215–220, 220 (2005)
142 JM Goldenring, The brain–life theory: towards a consistent biological definition of humanness, Journal of medical ethics, 11, 198–204 (1985).
143 Id.
144See MC Shea, Embryonic life and human life, Journal of medical ethics, 11, 205–209 (1985)
145 Id.
146 See D. DeGrazia, Human Identity and Bioethics, (2005).
147 RCC No. 32, Vol. 1, July 17, 1986,
148 RCC No. 32, Vol. 1, July 17, 1986,
149 RCC No. 32, Vol. 1, July 17, 1986,
150 RCC No. 32, Vol. 1, July 17, 1986,
151 RCC No. 32, Vol. 1, July 17, 1986.
152 RCC No. 32, Vol. 1, July 17, 1986.
153 RCC No. 32, Vol. 1, July 17, 1986.
154 RCC No. 32, Vol. 1, July 17, 1986.
155See C. Cameron and R. Williamson, In the world of Dolly, when does a human embryo acquire respect? J Med Ethics 31, 215–220 (2005).
156 Id.
157 Id.
158 Id.; See also http: www.bbc.co.uk=” ” religion=” ” religions=” ” christianity=” ” christianethics=” ” abortion_1.shtml=” " (visited March 29, 2014).
159See C. Cameron and R. Williamson, In the world of Dolly, when does a human embryo acquire respect? J MED ETHICS 31, 215–220, 216 (2005), citing Uren WJ. How is it right to treat the human embryo? The embryo and stem cell research. PACIFICA, 2003; 16:No 2:2.
160See http: www.bbc.co.uk=” ” religion=” ” religions=” ” christianity=” ” christianethics=” ” abortion_1.shtml=” " (visited March 29, 2014).
161See http: www.bbc.co.uk=” ” religion=” ” religions=” ” buddhism=” ” buddhistethics=” ” abortion.shtml=” " (visited March 29, 2014); http: www.bbc.co.uk=” ” religion=” ” religions=” ” hinduism=” ” hinduethics=” ” abortion_1.shtml=” " (visited March 29, 2014); http: www.bbc.co.uk=” ” religion=” ” religions=” ” sikhism=” ” sikhethics=” ” abortion.shtml=” " (visited March 29, 2014).
162See C. Cameron and R. Williamson, In the world of Dolly, when does a human embryo acquire respect? J Med Ethics 31, 215–220, 216 (2005).
163 Id.
164 RCC No. 32, Vol. 1, July 17, 1986.
165 Id.
166 G. Benagiano, Giuseppe, et al.,
Fate of fertilized human oocytes, Reproductive, BIOMEDICINE ONLINE, 21(6), 732–741 (2010).
167 See N. Macklon, NS., et al., Conception to ongoing pregnancy: the ‘black box’ of early pregnancy loss. HUMAN REPRODUCTION UPDATE. 8(4), 333–343 (2002).
168 RCC No. 81, Vol. IV, September 12, 1986.
169 Id.
170 N. Manish, APPROACH TO PRACTICAL PEDIATRICS 303 (2011); http: ghr.nlm.nih.gov=” ” condition=” ” down–syndrome=” "> (visited March 28, 2014).
171See L. Crowley, AN INTRODUCTION TO HUMAN DISEASE: PATHOLOGY AND PATHOPHYSIOLOGY CORRELATIONS 169 (2013); http: ghr.nlm.nih.gov=” ” condition=” ” turner–syndrome=” "> (visited March 28, 2014).
172See R. Goss, DEER ANTLERS, REGENERATION, FUNCTION AND EVOLUTION, 46 (1983); G. Feldhamer and W. McShea, DEER: THE ANIMAL ANSWER GUIDE, 4 (2012).
173 RCC No. 85, Vol. IV, September 17, 1986.
174 K. Edmonds (ed.), DEWHURST’S TEXTBOOK OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNAECOLOGY, 76–87, (8th ed.).
175 Id. at 101.
176 Id. at 105.
177 Id. at 107–108.
178 Id. at 105–109.
179 See http://www.cancer.gov/ncicancerbulletin/112911/page6> (visited March 28, 2014).
180 See http: www.doh.gov.ph=” ” kp=” ” statistics=” ” maternal_deaths.html=” "> (visited March 29, 2014).
181 RCC No. 84, Vol. IV, September 16, 1986.
182 See Article 7 Summa Theologiae on Whether it is Lawful to kill a man in self–defense, http: www.newadvent.org=” ” summa=” ” 3064.htm#article7=” "> (visited March 29, 2014); See also R. Hull, Deconstructing the Doctrine of Double Effect, June 2000, Ethical Theory & Moral Practice; June 2000, Vol. 3 Issue 2, p. 195 http: www.jstor.org=” ” discover=” ” 10.2307=” ” 27504131?uid="3738824&uid=2134&uid=12432296&uid=2&uid=70&uid=3&uid=8373192&uid=60&sid=21103877267793"> (visited March 29, 2014).
183 R. Hull, Deconstructing the Doctrine of Double Effect, June 2000, Ethical Theory & Moral Practice; June 2000, Vol. 3 Issue 2, p. 195 http: www.jstor.org=” ” discover=” ” 10.2307=” ” 27504131?uid="3738824&uid=2134&uid=12432296&uid=2&uid=70&uid=3&uid=8373192&uid=60&sid=21103877267793"> (visited March 29, 2014).
184 Vol. IV, September 16, 1986, RCC No. 84.
185 Dr. R. Virola, Statistics on Violence Against Women and Children: A Morally Rejuvenating Philippine Society? http: www.nscb.gov.ph=” ” headlines=” ” statsspeak=” ” 2008=” ” 090808_rav_wedc.asp=” "> (visited March 29, 2014); Dr. R. Virola, Abused Children, http: www.nscb.gov.ph=” ” headlines=” ” statsspeak=” ” 2011=” ” 101011_rav.asp=” "> (visited March 29, 2014).
186 Dr. R. Virola, Abused Children, http: www.nscb.gov.ph=” ” headlines=” ” statsspeak=” ” 2011=” ” 101011_rav.asp=” "> (visited March 29, 2014).
187 2008 National Demographic and Health Survey, accessed from Demographic and Health Surveys Program, website at http: dhsprogram.com=” ” pubs=” ” pdf=” ” fr224=” ” fr224.pdf=” "> on April 3, 2014. P. 90–91.
188See for example Alliance for the Family Foundation, et al., rollo, vol. 1, pp. 1278–1291.
189See Joint Memorandum of House of Representatives and respondent–intervenor Edcel Lagman, rollo (G.R. no. 204819), vol. 3, pp. 2330–2333..; Memorandum of respondents–intervenors Filipino Catholic Voices for Reproductive Health, et al., rollo, (G.R. No. 204819), vol. 3, p. 2255.
190 A. Vander, et al. HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY: THE MECHANISMS OF BODY FUNCTION 664 (8th Ed. 2001).
191 Id. at 664–665; See S. Geoffrey, et al., IN VITRO FERTILIZATION: THE A.R.T.* OF MAKING BABIES (*ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY) 32 (4th Ed. 2013).
192 A. Vander, et al. Human Physiology: THE MECHANISMS OF BODY FUNCTION 664 (8th Ed. 2001)
193 Id. at 663.
194 Id; See also Human Reproduction: Anatomy and Physiology, Marquette University Website http: nfp.marquette.edu=” ” reproduction.php=” "> (visitedMarch 27, 2014).
195 See Vander at 663; See review of literature in S. Pallone and G. Bergus, Fertility Awareness–Based Methods: Another Option for Family Planning, J.Am.Board Fam. Med., 22(2):147–157 (2001); See S. Geoffrey, et al., IN VITRO FERTILIZATION: The A.R.T.* of Making Babies (*ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY) 30 (4th ed. 2013; See also Human Reproduction: Anatomy and Physiology, Marquette University Website http: nfp.marquette.edu=” ” reproduction.php=” "> (visitedMarch 27, 2014); See also C. Thibault, Physiology and physiopathology of the fallopian tube by, http: www.popline.org=” ” node=” ” 494007=” " ( visited March 27, 2014).
196 A. Vander, et al. HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY: THE MECHANISMS OF BODY FUNCTION 663 (8th Ed. 2001).
197 Id. at 665; See S. Geoffrey, et al., IN VITRO FERTILIZATION: THE A.R.T.* OF MAKING BABIES (*ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY) 34–35 (4th Ed. 2013).
198 See Vander, at 665.
199 Id; See S. Geoffrey, et al., IN VITRO FERTILIZATION: THE A.R.T.* OF MAKING BABIES (*ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY) 32–33 (4th Ed. 2013).
200See Vander at 665.
201 Id.
202 Id. 665.
203See C. Beckman, et al., OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY (7th ed.), available at
https: www.inkling.com=” ” read=” ” obstetrics–gynecology–beckmann–7th=” ” chapter–19=” ” ectopic–pregnancy=” " (visited on March 27, 2014).
204 See Vander at 669.
205 Id at 677.
206 Id.
207 See N. Macklon, NS., et al., Conception to ongoing pregnancy: the ‘black box’ of early pregnancy loss, HUMAN REPRODUCTION UPDATE. 8(4), 333–343 (2002). See also G. Benagiano, Giuseppe, et al., Fate of fertilized human oocytes, Reproductive, BIOMEDICINE ONLINE, 21(6), 732–742 (2010); S. Geoffrey, et al., IN VITRO FERTILIZATION: THE A.R.T.* OF MAKING BABIES (*ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY) 39 (4th Ed. 2013).
208 Id.
209See N. Macklon, NS., et al., Conception to ongoing pregnancy: the ‘black box’ of early pregnancy loss. HUMAN REPRODUCTION UPDATE. 8(4), 333, 337 (2002).citing Boue et al 1975 and Eiben, et al. 1987.
210 Id. at 334.
211 G. Benagiano, Giuseppe, et al., Fate of fertilized human oocytes, Reproductive, BIOMEDICINE ONLINE, 21(6), 732–742 (2010); See also Id. at 333–343.
212 Id; See S. Geoffrey, et al., IN VITRO FERTILIZATION: THE A.R.T.* OF MAKING BABIES (*ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY) 39 (4th Ed. 2013).
213See G. Benagiano, Giuseppe, et al., Fate of fertilized human oocytes, Reproductive, BIOMEDICINE ONLINE, 21(6), 732–742 (2010); See N. Macklon, NS., et al., Conception to ongoing pregnancy: the ‘black box’ of early pregnancy loss. HUMAN REPRODUCTION UPDATE. 8(4), 333, 335 (2002).
214 Id.
215See Vander at 669.
216 Id. at 668–669.
217See Joint Memorandum of House of Representatives and respondent–intervenor, Lagman, rollo (G.R. No. 204819), vol. 3, pp. 2330–2333.
218 See K. Grens, When does pregnancy begin? Doctors disagree, November 17, 2011, http: www.reuters.com=” ” article=” ” 2011=” ” 11=” ” 17=” ” us–when–does–pregnancy–begin–idustre7ag24b20111117=” " (visited March 25, 2014); See for example E. Foley, THE LAW OF LIFE AND DEATH BY ELIZABETH PRICE FOLEY 59(2011) President and Fellows of Harvard College; See Vander at 677.
219 D. DeGrazia, HUMAN IDENTITY AND BIOETHICS, DAVID DEGRAZIA, 246 (2005).
220 Id.
221 Id. 247.
222 Id.
223 Id. at 248.
224 Id. at 248.
225 Id.
226See Id. at 249.
227 Id.
228 Id. at 250–251.
229 Id.
230 See Id. at 246–252.
231 Id. at 252.
232 Id.
233 Id. at 252.
234 Id. at 253.
235 The American College of OBSTETRICIANS AND GYNECOLOGIESTS, Frequently Asked Questions, FAQ155: Pregnancy, available at http: www.acog.org=” ” ~=” ” media=” ” for%20patients=” ” faq155.pdf?dmc="1&ts=20140323T2143090835" (visited on March 24, 2014); See C. Beckman, et al., OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY (7th ed. ), available at < https://www.inkling.com/read/obstetrics–gynecology–beckmann–7th/chapter–19/ectopic–pregnancy> (visited on March 27, 2014); See S. Geoffrey, et al., IN VITRO FERTILIZATION: THE A.R.T.* OF MAKING BABIES (*ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY) 33 (4th Ed. 2013).
236 The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologiests, Frequently Asked Questions, FAQ155: Pregnancy, available at http: www.acog.org=” ” ~=” ” media=” ” for%20patients=” ” faq155.pdf?dmc="1&ts=20140323T2143090835" (visitedon March 24, 2014); See C. Beckman, et al., OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY (7th ed. ), available at < https://www.inkling.com/read/obstetrics–gynecology–beckmann–7th/chapter–19/ectopic–pregnancy> (visited on March 27, 2014).
237 Id.
238 Id. See S. Geoffrey, et al., IN VITRO FERTILIZATION: THE A.R.T.* OF MAKING BABIES (*ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY) 50 (4th Ed. 2013).
239 Id.
240 Id.
241 Id.
242See K. Contraception: Mechanism of action of emergency contraception, 82(5):404–9 (2010) available at http: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov=” ” pubmed=” ” 20933113=” " (visited on March 24, 2014); See also World Health Organization Website, Emergency Contraception Fact Sheet, July 2012, http: www.who.int=” ” mediacentre=” ” factsheets=” ” fs244=” ” en=” ", (visited on March 24, 2014).
243See Alliance for the Family Foundation, et al.’s Memorandum, pp. 134–136.
244 Center for Disease Control and Prevention, What is Assisted Reproductive Technology, http: www.cdc.gov=” ” art=” "> (visited March 24, 2014).
245 National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Assisted Reproductive Technologies, https: www.nichd.nih.gov=” ” health=” ” topics=” ” infertility=” ” conditioninfo=” ” pages=” ” art.aspx=” ", (visited March 24, 2014).
246 See S. Geoffrey, et al., IN VITRO FERTILIZATION: THE A.R.T.* OF MAKING BABIES (*ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY) 69–89 (4th Ed. 2013); See also IVF – What is in vitro fertilisation (IVF) and how does it work? Human Fertilisation Embryology Authority http: www.hfea.gov.uk=” ” ivf.html=” "> (visited March 27, 2014).
247 See S. Geoffrey, et al., IN VITRO FERTILIZATION: THE A.R.T.* OF MAKING BABIES (*ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY) 90–114 (4th Ed. 2013); See also IVF – What is in vitro fertilisation (IVF) and how does it work? Human Fertilisation Embryology Authority http: www.hfea.gov.uk=” ” ivf.html=” "> (visited March 27, 2014).
248 Id.
249See also IVF – What is in vitro fertilisation (IVF) and how does it work? Human Fertilisation Embryology Authority http: www.hfea.gov.uk=” ” ivf.html=” "> (visited March 27, 2014).
250See for example Abstract of N Darlington and P Matson, The Fate of cryopreserved human embryos approaching their legal limit of storage within a West Australian in–vitro fertilization clinic, Human Reproduction 14(9),2343–4 (1999), http: www.researchgate.net=” ” publication=” ” 12829735_the_fate_of_cryopreserved_human_embryos_approaching_their_legal_limit_of_storage_within_a_west_australian_in–vitro_fertilization_clinic=” " (visited March 27,, 2014); (See also abstract by R. Nachtigall et al., How couples who have undergone in vitro fertilization decide what to do with surplus frozen embryos < http://www.researchgate.net/publication/26760504_How_couples_who_have_undergone_in_vitro_fertilization_decide_what_to_do_with_surplus_frozen_embryos> (visited March 27, 2014); See also IVF – What is in vitro fertilisation (IVF) and how does it work? Human Fertilisation Embryology Authority < March 27, 2014).
251 Id.
252 Ponencia, p. 45.
253 Id.
254 603 SCRA 621, 634-635 (2009).
255Continental Steel v. Montano, 603 SCRA 621, 634-635 (2009).
256 Rep. Act No. 9711. Section 5(h) (2009).
257 HP Rang, et al., Rang and Dale’s Pharmacology 37(7th ed. 2012).
258 Id at 37-38.
259 Id. at 39-41.
260 Id. at 39-41.
261 MIMS, Philippines, Aspilets ,http://www.mims.com/Philippines/drug/info/aspilets-aspilets- ec/?q=aspirin&type=brief (visited March 25, 2014).
262 Id.
263 MIMS, Philippines, http://www.mims.com/Philippines/drug/info/Aldomet/?type=full#SideEffects (visited March 25, 2014).
264 Id.
265See Abstract JW, Gardner, Death by water intoxication, MIL MED. 167(5), 432-4 (2002) http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12053855, (visited March 24, 2014).
266Monthly Prescribing Reference (MPR) http://www.empr.com/drugs-contraindicated-in- pregnancy/article/125914/ (visited April 3, 2014).
267 See Pia Cayetano, Memorandum, rollo (G.R. No. 204819), vol. 4, p. 3041.
268 Id. at 3045.
269See Morfe v. Mutuc, G.R. L-20387, 22 SCRA 424, January 31, 1968 [En Banc, J. Fernando]; See also
Ermita-Malata Hotel and Motel Operators Association, Inc. v. City Mayor of Manila, G.R. L-24693, 20 SCRA 849, July 31, 1967. [En Banc, J. Fernando].
270 Philippine Drug Formulary: Essential Drugs List, Vol. 7, 2008. 78-80.
271 Id. at vii-viii.
272 Id. at 146.
273 Rep. Act No. 9711. Section 5(h) (2009).
274 See Declaration of Geneva (1948). Adopted by the General Assembly of World Medical Association at Geneva Switzerland, September 1948. The Philippine Medical Association is a member of the World Medical Association.<http://www.wma.net/en/60about/10members/21memberlist/index.html?letter=P#Philippines> (visited April 4, 2014); See also Hippocratic Oath, available at:<https://www.philippinemedicalassociation.org/downloads/pma-codes/HIPPOCRATIC-OATH.pdf> (visited April 4, 2014). (visited April 4, 2014).
275 R Cook, and B Dickens, The Growing Abuse of Conscientious Objection, VIRTUAL MENTOR: ETHICS JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 8(5), 337-340 (2006). (The article cites the World Medical Association’s Declaration of Geneva available at www.wma.net/e/policy/c8.htm); See also R Cook, et al. REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH AND HUMAN RIGHTS: INTEGRATING MEDICINE, ETHICS AND LAW, 139-142, 213-214, 291-292 (2003). See Also B Dickens and R Cook, The Scope and Limits of Conscientious Objection, Int. J. Gynaecol Obstet. 71,71-77 (2000); See also J Savulescu Conscientious objection in medicine British Medical Journal, 332, 294-297 (2006).
276 J. Morrison and M. Allekotte, Duty First: Towards Patient-Centered Care and Limitations on the Right to Refuse for Moral, Religious, or Ethical Reasons. AVE MARIA LAW REVIEW, Vol. 9, No. 1, pp. 141-184 (2010).
277 R. Cook and B. Dickens, Op-Ed The Growing Abuse of Conscientious Objection. ETHICS JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION. Vol. 8 No. 5, pp.337-340 (2006).
278 Rep. Act No. 10354, Section 4(q).
279See M. Lindenbaum, Religious Conscientious Objection and the Establishment Clause in the Rehnquist Court: Seeger, Welsh, Gillette, and § 6(j) Revisited, 36 Colum. J.L. & Soc. Probs. 237, 263 (This article discussed Supreme Court decisions interpreting Section 6(j) of the Military Selective Service Act, which provided an exemption from services in the United States army for those “who, by religious training and belief [are] conscientiously opposed to war in any form.”).
280 CONSTITUTION, Article III, section 5.
281 CONSTITUTION, Article III, section 5. No law shall be made respecting an establishment of religion x x
x.
282 CONSTITUTION, Article II, section 6.
283 CONSTITUTION, Article III, section 5. x x x The free exercise and enjoyment of religious profession and worship, without discrimination or preference, shall forever be allowed x x x.
284 G.R. No. 119673. 259 SCRA 529 (1996) [En Banc, Per J. Puno].
285 Id. at 544.
286Estrada v. Escritor, A.M. No. P-02-1651, 408 SCRA 1 (2003) [En Banc, Per J. Puno].
287 Id. at167-168.
288 Id. at106-107, citing Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U.S. 602 (1971), pp. 612-613.
289 http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/ religion (visited March 23, 2014).
290 (visited March 22, 2014) <http://www.onu.edu/academics/college_of_arts_sciences/academic_departments/philosophy_and_religion
/what_is_religion> (visited March 23, 2014).
291 See I. Howerth, What is Religion? INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ETHICS, 13(2), (1903). available at <http://www.jstor.org/stable/2376451?seq=21> (visited March 22, 2014).
292Aglipay v. Ruiz, 64 Phil 201 (1937) [Per J. Laurel].
293 Id. at 206.
294See The Concept of Religion, 107 Yale L.J. 791 (1997) and its discussions on Wittgenstein.
295 De Venecia, et al. Comment-in-Intervention, rollo (G.R. No. 205491), vol. 1, p. 376. citing Gary Wills, Papal Sin: Structures of Deceit, (New York: Image, 2001), at 75.
296 Id. citing Truth & Consequence, Wills at 7.
297 Id. at 377 citing Gary Wills, Papal Sin: Structures of Deceit, (New York: Image, 2001), at 88-89.
298 Id. at 378.
299 Id. citing Gary Wills, Papal Sin: Structures of Deceit, (New York: Image, 2001), at 94, and noting that these were Father John Ford and Cardinal Ottaviani, working with an ultraconservative theologian, Germain Grisez, whom they had brought into the committee’s work for that purpose, and whom the Pro-Life Petition cites in pars. 52-53, at 24.
300 Id. citing Gary Wills, Papal Sin: Structures of Deceit, (New York: Image, 2001), at 95.
301 Id. at 376, citing Gary Wills, Papal Sin: Structures of Deceit, (New York: Image, 2001), at 95-96.
302 De Venecia, et al. Comment-in-Intervention, rollo (G.R. No. 205491), vol. 1, p. 382. citing Gary Wills, Papal Sin: Structures of Deceit, (New York: Image, 2001), at 73-82.
303 Id. at 379-388 citing Gary Wills, Papal Sin: Structures of Deceit, (New York: Image, 2001), at 89-96.
304 Id. at 390, citing Truth & Consequence, Wills at 7.
305 See D. Gonzales, FUNDAMENTALISM AND PLURALISM IN THE CHURCH, ed., 94-96 (2004):
Fundamentalist beliefs were first articulated with the publication of a series of twelve pamphlets published between 1910 and 1915 with the title, The Fundamentals. North American fundamentalist beliefs are generally characterized by four features: evangelism, inerrancy, dispensational premillennialism, and separatism. (Dumestre, 49).
- Evangelism - the compulsion to evangelize comes from the importance that fundamentalists place in “being saved.” If being saved is the sure way to heaven, then it is incumbent upon the “saved” to bring Jesus Christ to the “lost.”
- Inerrancy - fundamentalists believe in an inerrant interpretation of the Bible. In other words, no part of the Bible can be in error.
- Dispensational Premillenialism means that salvation will be dispensed to the Christian faithful at the coming of Christ prior to the millennium (the thousand-year reign of Christ)(Mt 24, 1 Th 4).
- Separatism - dissenting opinions are not tolerated by fundamentalists; their primary value is uniformity of belief and practice.
306 Millennium Saint Foundation, Inc. Memorandum, p. 26.
307 Couples for Christ Petition, rollo (G.R. No. 207172), vol. 1, p 31.
308 Ponencia, p. 78.
309 CONSTITUTION, Article XV, section 3. The State shall defend:
- The right of spouses to found a family in accordance with their religious convictions and the demands of responsible parenthood;
310Morfe v. Mutuc, 130 Phil 415 (1968) [Per J. Fernando].
311 Id. at 435-436.
312See also Note on Reproductive Technology and The Procreation Rights of the Unmarried, 98 Harv. L. Rev. 669, (1985).
313See P. Scheininger, Legal Separateness, Private Connectedness: An Impediment to Gender Equality in the Family, 31 Colum. J.L. & Soc. Probs. 283, 304.
314Ponencia, pp. 79-80.
315 J. Reyes, Concurring and Dissenting Opinion, p. 6.
316 Id. at 78.
317 Id. at 79.
318Garcia v. Executive Secretary, G.R. No. 100883, December 2, 1991, 204 SCRA 516, 523 [En Banc, per J. Cruz]
319See Del Castillo, J., Concurring and Dissenting Opinion, pp. 19-35.
320 Cited as 361 Phil. 73 (1999).
321Cited as 361 Phil. 73, 88 (1999).
322 Del Castillo, J., Concurring and Dissenting Opinion, p. 20.
323 Id. at 26-27.
324 361 Phil. 73 (1999); 301 SCRA 96, 112.
325 CONSTITUTION, Article, VII, section 17.
326Angara v. Electoral Commission, 63 Phil. 139, 156 (1936) [Per J. Laurel, En Banc].
327 CONSTITUTION, Article VIII, section 1.
328 CONSTITUTION, Article VIII, section 1.
329 Comment-in-Intervention, Representative Edcel B. Lagman, rollo (G.R. No. 204819), vol. 1, p. 198 (“from the 11th Congress to the current 15th Congress x x x [which included] the latest versions of the Reproductive Health Bills (House Bill No. 4244, entitled “An Act Providing for a Comprehensive Policy on Responsible Parenthood, Reproductive Health, and Population and Development and For Other Purposes” in the House of Representatives and Senate Bill No. 2865, entitled “An Act Providing for a National Policy on Reproductive Health and Population and Development” in the Senate.) See also Office of the Solicitor General Memorandum, pp. 6 and 11.
330 (In a UNICEF study covering the period 1990-2011, it was estimated that “in the Philippines, 13 mothers die every day from pregnancy-related complications. An estimated 5,000 maternal deaths occur annually - and may be on the increase. The most recent health survey indicated that the maternal mortality ratio had increased, from 162 per 100,000 live births in 2006 to 221 in 2011)”See WHO Maternal and Perinatal Health Profile for the Western Pacific Region, Philippines <http://www.who.int/maternal_child_adolescent/epidemiology/profiles/maternal/phl.pdf?ua=1> (visited March 21, 2014); <http://www.unicef.org/philippines/MNH_Philippines_Country_Profile.pdf>(visited March 25, 2014); (Maternal death is defined as "...the death of a women within 42 days of the end of pregnancy, regardless of duration or site of pregnancy, from any cause related to or aggravated by the pregnancy or its management, but not from accidental (e.g. auto accident or gunshot wound) or incidental causes. (e.g. concurrent malignancy)", See Hernandez, Jr., Emilio et.al. Standards of Newborn Care. 4 (3rd Ed. 2008) Philippine Society of Newborn Medicine, Philippine Pediatric Society.
331 (In 2008, the still-birth rate was 14.4 per 1000 pregnancies of at least 7 months duration.) See <http://www.who.int/maternal_child_adolescent/epidemiology/profiles/maternal/phl.pdf> (visited April 6, 2014).
332 (Neonatal death is defined as “Death of live born neonate before the neonate becomes 28 days (up to and including 27 days, 23 hours, 59 minutes from the moment of birth.)”), See Hernandez, Jr., Emilio et.al. Standards of Newborn Care. 3 (3rd ed. 2008) Philippine Society of Newborn Medicine, Philippine Pediatric Society.;(The 2008 National Demographic and Health Survey estimates that the neonatal mortality rate within the 5 preceding years was 16 deaths per 1000 live births.)
333 (Demand for family planning: poorest 20% quintile--about 60%, richest 20% quintile, 70%; Access to skilled birth attendance: poorest 20% quintile-about 25%, richest 20% quintile-about 90%; Delivery in a health facility: poorest-about 10%, richest-about 75%; Antenatal care utilization: lowest quintile-77.1%, highest quintile-98.3%) See <http://countdown2015mnch.org/documents/2013Report/Philippines_Accountability_profile_2013.pdf>(visited April 3, 2014) through <http://www.who.int/gho/countries/phl/country_profiles/en> May 2013; See also R. Lavado L. Lagrada, Are Maternal and Child Care Programs Reaching the Poorest Regions in the Philippines? DISCUSSION PAPER SERIES NO. 2008-30, (November 2008) <http://dirp4.pids.gov.ph/ris/dps/pidsdps0830.pdf> (visited April 3, 2014); 2008 National Demographic and Health Survey, Demographic and Health Surveys Program, <http://dhsprogram.com/pubs/pdf/FR224/FR224.pdf> (visited April 3, 2014)