The case at bar is the first decision on the application of the Rule on the
Writ of Amparo (
Amparo Rule). Let us hearken to its beginning.
The adoption of the
Amparo
Rule surfaced as a recurring proposition in the recommendations that
resulted from a two-day National Consultative Summit on Extrajudicial
Killings and Enforced Disappearances sponsored by the Court on July
16-17, 2007. The Summit was "envisioned to provide a broad and
fact-based perspective on the issue of extrajudicial killings and
enforced disappearances,"
[71]
hence "representatives from all sides of the political and social
spectrum, as well as all the stakeholders in the justice system"
[72] participated in mapping out ways to resolve the crisis.
On October 24, 2007, the Court promulgated the
Amparo Rule "in light of the prevalence of extralegal killing and enforced disappearances."
[73]
It was an exercise for the first time of the Court's expanded power to
promulgate rules to protect our people's constitutional rights, which
made its maiden appearance in the 1987 Constitution in response to the
Filipino experience of the martial law regime.
[74] As the
Amparo
Rule was intended to address the intractable problem of "extralegal
killings" and "enforced disappearances," its coverage, in its present
form, is confined to these two instances or to threats thereof.
"Extralegal killings" are "killings committed without due process of
law,
i.e., without legal safeguards or judicial proceedings."
[75]
On the other hand, "enforced disappearances" are "attended by the
following characteristics: an arrest, detention or abduction of a person
by a government official or organized groups or private individuals
acting with the direct or indirect acquiescence of the government; the
refusal of the State to disclose the fate or whereabouts of the person
concerned or a refusal to acknowledge the deprivation of liberty which
places such persons outside the protection of law."
[76] The
writ of amparo originated in Mexico. "
Amparo" literally means "protection" in Spanish.
[77] In 1837, de Tocqueville's
Democracy in America
became available in Mexico and stirred great interest. Its description
of the practice of judicial review in the U.S. appealed to many Mexican
jurists.
[78] One of them, Manuel Crescencio Rejón, drafted a constitutional provision for his native state, Yucatan,
[79]
which granted judges the power to protect all persons in the enjoyment
of their constitutional and legal rights. This idea was incorporated
into the national constitution in 1847,
viz:
The
federal courts shall protect any inhabitant of the Republic in the
exercise and preservation of those rights granted to him by this
Constitution and by laws enacted pursuant hereto, against attacks by the
Legislative and Executive powers of the federal or state governments,
limiting themselves to granting protection in the specific case in
litigation, making no general declaration concerning the statute or
regulation that motivated the violation.[80]
Since then, the protection has been an important part of Mexican constitutionalism.
[81]
If, after hearing, the judge determines that a constitutional right of
the petitioner is being violated, he orders the official, or the
official's superiors, to cease the violation and to take the necessary
measures to restore the petitioner to the full enjoyment of the right in
question.
Amparo thus combines the principles of judicial
review derived from the U.S. with the limitations on judicial power
characteristic of the civil law tradition which prevails in Mexico. It
enables courts to enforce the constitution by protecting individual
rights in particular cases, but prevents them from using this power to
make law for the entire nation.
[82]The
writofamparo
then spread throughout the Western Hemisphere, gradually evolving into
various forms, in response to the particular needs of each country.
[83]
It became, in the words of a justice of the Mexican Federal Supreme
Court, one piece of Mexico's self-attributed "task of conveying to the
world's legal heritage that institution which, as a shield of human
dignity, her own painful history conceived."
[84]
What began as a protection against acts or omissions of public
authorities in violation of constitutional rights later evolved for
several purposes: (1)
amparo libertad for the protection of personal freedom, equivalent to the
habeas corpuswrit; (
2)
amparo contra leyes for the judicial review of the constitutionality of statutes; (3)
amparo casacion for the judicial review of the constitutionality and legality of a judicial decision; (4)
amparo administrativo for the judicial review of administrative actions; and (5)
amparo agrario for the protection of peasants' rights derived from the agrarian reform process.
[85]In Latin American countries, except Cuba, the
writofamparo
has been constitutionally adopted to protect against human rights
abuses especially committed in countries under military juntas. In
general, these countries adopted an all-encompassing writ to protect the
whole gamut of constitutional rights, including socio-economic rights.
[86] Other countries like Colombia, Chile, Germany and Spain, however, have chosen to limit the protection of the
writofamparo only to some constitutional guarantees or fundamental rights.
[87]In the Philippines, while the 1987 Constitution does not explicitly provide for the
writofamparo, several of the above
amparo
protections are guaranteed by our charter. The second paragraph of
Article VIII, Section 1 of the 1987 Constitution, the Grave Abuse
Clause, provides for the judicial power "to determine whether or not
there has been a grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess
of jurisdiction on the part of any branch or instrumentality of the
Government." The Clause accords a similar general protection to human
rights extended by the
amparo contra leyes,
amparo casacion, and
amparo administrativo.
Amparo libertad is comparable to the remedy of
habeas corpus found in several provisions of the 1987 Constitution.
[88] The Clause is an offspring of the U.S. common law tradition of judicial review, which finds its roots in the 1803 case of
Marbury v. Madison.
[89]While
constitutional rights can be protected under the Grave Abuse Clause
through remedies of injunction or prohibition under Rule 65 of the Rules
of Court and a petition for
habeas corpus under Rule 102,
[90]
these remedies may not be adequate to address the pestering problem of
extralegal killings and enforced disappearances. However, with the
swiftness required to resolve a petition for a
writofamparo through summary proceedings and the availability of appropriate interim and permanent reliefs under the
Amparo
Rule, this hybrid writ of the common law and civil law traditions -
borne out of the Latin American and Philippine experience of human
rights abuses - offers a better remedy to extralegal killings and
enforced disappearances and threats thereof. The remedy provides rapid
judicial relief as it partakes of a summary proceeding that requires
only substantial evidence to make the appropriate reliefs available to
the petitioner; it is not an action to determine criminal guilt
requiring proof beyond reasonable doubt, or liability for damages
requiring preponderance of evidence, or administrative responsibility
requiring substantial evidence that will require full and exhaustive
proceedings.
[91]The
writofamparo
serves both preventive and curative roles in addressing the problem of
extralegal killings and enforced disappearances. It is preventive in
that it breaks the expectation of impunity in the commission of these
offenses; it is curative in that it facilitates the subsequent
punishment of perpetrators as it will inevitably yield leads to
subsequent investigation and action. In the long run, the goal of both
the preventive and curative roles is to deter the further commission of
extralegal killings and enforced disappearances.
In the case at bar, respondents initially filed an action for "Prohibition, Injunction, and Temporary Restraining Order"
[92]
to stop petitioners and/or their officers and agents from depriving the
respondents of their right to liberty and other basic rights on August
23, 2007,
[93] prior to the promulgation of the
Amparo Rule.
They also sought ancillary remedies including Protective Custody
Orders, Appointment of Commissioner, Inspection and Access Orders and
other legal and equitable remedies under Article VIII, Section 5(5) of
the 1987 Constitution and Rule 135, Section 6 of the Rules of Court.
When the
Amparo Rule came into effect on October 24, 2007, they moved to have their petition treated as an
amparo
petition as it would be more effective and suitable to the
circumstances of the Manalo brothers' enforced disappearance. The Court
granted their motion.
With this backdrop, we now come to the
arguments of the petitioner. Petitioners' first argument in disputing
the Decision of the Court of Appeals states,
viz:
The
Court of Appeals seriously and grievously erred in believing and giving
full faith and credit to the incredible uncorroborated, contradicted,
and obviously scripted, rehearsed and self-serving affidavit/testimony
of herein respondent Raymond Manalo.
[94]