Ynot
v Intermediate Appellate Court 148 SCRA 659
Nature: Review on Certiorari
Keywords: Requirements of due process; Fundamental Powers of the
State: POLICE POWER
Summary: RTC -
sustained confiscation of the carabaos; and decline to rule on the
constitutionality of the EO for lack of authority. IAC - upheld RTC decision.
SC - reversed CA decision.
CRUZ, J.
Facts: There had been an
existing law which prohibited the slaughtering of carabaos (EO 626). To
strengthen the law, Marcos issued EO 626-A which not only banned the movement
of carabaos from interprovinces but as well as the movement of carabeef. On 13
Jan 1984, Ynot was caught transporting 6 carabaos from Masbate to Iloilo. He
was then charged in violation of EO 626-A. Ynot averred EO 626-A as
unconstitutional for it violated his right to be heard or his right to due
process. He said that the authority provided by EO 626-A to outrightly
confiscate carabaos even without being heard is unconstitutional. The lower
court ruled against Ynot ruling that the EO is a valid exercise of police power
in order to promote general welfare so as to curb down the indiscriminate
slaughter of carabaos
Issue:
1. Whether
or not the said Executive Order is valid.
Ratio: The
SC ruled that the EO is not valid as it indeed violates due process. EO 626-A
created a presumption based on the judgment of the executive. The movement of
carabaos from one area to the other does not mean a subsequent slaughter of the
same would ensue. Ynot should be given to defend himself and explain why the
carabaos are being transferred before they can be confiscated. The SC found
that the challenged measure is an invalid exercise of the police power because
the method employed to conserve the carabaos is not reasonably necessary to the
purpose of the law and, worse, is unduly oppressive. Due process is violated because the owner of the property confiscated
is denied the right to be heard in his defense and is immediately condemned and
punished. The conferment on the administrative authorities of the power to
adjudge the guilt of the supposed offender is a clear encroachment on judicial
functions and militates against the doctrine of separation of powers. There
is, finally, also an invalid delegation of legislative powers to the officers
mentioned therein who are granted unlimited discretion in the distribution of
the properties arbitrarily taken.
Ruling: WHEREFORE, Executive
Order No. 626-A is hereby declared unconstitutional. Except as affirmed above,
the decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed. The supersedeas bond is
cancelled and the amount thereof is ordered restored to the petitioner. No
costs. SO ORDERED.
Note: The minimum requirements
of due process are notice and hearing
which, generally speaking, may not be dispensed with because they are intended
as a safeguard against official arbitrariness. It is a gratifying commentary on
our judicial system that the jurisprudence of this country is rich with
applications of this guaranty as proof of our fealty to the rule of law and the
ancient rudiments of fair play. We have consistently declared that every
person, faced by the awesome power of the State, is entitled to "the law
of the land," which Daniel Webster described almost two hundred years ago
in the famous Dartmouth College Case, 14 as "the law which hears before it
condemns, which proceeds upon inquiry and renders judgment only after
trial." It has to be so if the rights of every person are to be secured
beyond the reach of officials who, out of mistaken zeal or plain arrogance,
would degrade the due process clause into a worn and empty catchword.
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