ut magis valeat quam pereat. The Constitution is to be interpreted as a whole. Thus, in Chiongbian v. De Leon,42 this Court, through Chief Justice Manuel Moran declared:
x x x [T]he members of the Constitutional
Convention could not have dedicated a provision of our Constitution
merely for the benefit of one person without considering that it could
also affect others. When they adopted subsection 2, they permitted,
if not willed, that said provision should function to the full extent of
its substance and its terms, not by itself alone, but in conjunction
with all other provisions of that great document.43 (Emphasis and underscoring supplied)
Likewise, still in Civil Liberties Union v. Executive Secretary,44 this Court affirmed that:
It is a well-established rule in constitutional
construction that no one provision of the Constitution is to be
separated from all the others, to be considered alone, but that all the
provisions bearing upon a particular subject are to be brought into view
and to be so interpreted as to effectuate the great purposes of the
instrument. Sections bearing on a particular subject should be
considered and interpreted together as to effectuate the whole purpose
of the Constitution and one section is not to be allowed to defeat
another, if by any reasonable construction, the two can be made to stand
together.
In other words, the court must harmonize them, if
practicable, and must lean in favor of a construction which will render
every word operative, rather than one which may make the words idle and
nugatory.45 (Emphasis supplied)
If, however, the plain meaning of the word is not
found to be clear, resort to other aids is available. In still the same
case of Civil Liberties Union v. Executive Secretary, this Court expounded:
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.46 (Emphasis and underscoring supplied)
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