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Comelec Cases in Consti1

The COMELEC charged three individuals, including the provincial prosecutor of Bataan and the secretary of the Provincial Board of Canvassers of Bataan, with tampering with election certificates relating to a 1995 senatorial candidate. The cases were dismissed and the COMELEC sought to appeal but the Chief State Prosecutor, who had been designated to prosecute the cases, opposed the appeal. The issue was whether the COMELEC or the prosecutor had the authority to decide on an appeal. The Supreme Court ruled that the COMELEC, not the prosecutor, had the sole authority to decide on appeals as the Constitution grants the COMELEC exclusive power to investigate and prosecute election law violations
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
103 views2 pages

Comelec Cases in Consti1

The COMELEC charged three individuals, including the provincial prosecutor of Bataan and the secretary of the Provincial Board of Canvassers of Bataan, with tampering with election certificates relating to a 1995 senatorial candidate. The cases were dismissed and the COMELEC sought to appeal but the Chief State Prosecutor, who had been designated to prosecute the cases, opposed the appeal. The issue was whether the COMELEC or the prosecutor had the authority to decide on an appeal. The Supreme Court ruled that the COMELEC, not the prosecutor, had the sole authority to decide on appeals as the Constitution grants the COMELEC exclusive power to investigate and prosecute election law violations
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Case No.

11 Commission on Elections
COMELEC vs. SILVA
G.R. No. 129417 February 10, 1998

FACTS:

COMELEC charged private respondents Erasto Tanciongco and Norma Castillo with violations of
Sec. 27 of R.A. No. 6646, together with Zenon Uy, in twelve separate informations filed with the
Regional Trial Court of Bataan. Tanciongco, who is provincial prosecutor of Bataan, was vice
chairman, while Castillo, who is division superintendent of schools, was secretary of the
Provincial Board of Canvassers of Bataan. Uy, who is assistant regional director of elections, was
chairman of the board. In each information, the three were accused of having tampered, in
conspiracy with one another, with the certificates of canvass by increasing the votes received by
then senatorial candidate Juan Ponce Enrile in certain municipalities of Bataan in the May 8, 1995
elections.

The Private Respondents moved for the Dismissal of the Cases filed against them. The Chief State
Prosecutor, who had been designated by the Commission on Elections to prosecute the cases,
filed a comment joining in private respondents' request. Eventually, the cases were dismissed.
The COMELEC sought to appeal the dismissal of the cases to the Court of Appeals. When the Chief
State Prosecutor was required to comment, he stated that he cannot give his conformity to the
Notice of Appeal filed by the Comelec as it would not be consistent with his position that he
would abide by whatever finding the court may come up with on the existence of probable cause
as against the Private Respondents. Thus, the judges denied due course to the appeal. The sole
basis for the denial was the fact that the prosecutor, whom the COMELEC had deputized to
prosecute the cases, had earlier taken a contrary stand against the COMELEC.

ISSUE:

Who has the authority to decide whether or not to appeal from the orders of dismissal — the
COMELEC or its designated prosecutor?

RULING:

Whether the orders of dismissal should be appealed is for the COMELEC to decide, not for Chief
State Prosecutor whom it has merely deputized to represent in it court. The 1987 Constitution
mandates the COMELEC not only to investigate but also to prosecute cases of violation of election
laws. This means that the COMELEC is empowered to conduct preliminary investigations in cases
involving election offenses for the purpose of helping the Judge determine probable cause and
for filing information in court. This power is exclusive with COMELEC.

Prosecutors designated by the COMELEC to prosecute the cases act as its deputies. They derive
their authority from it and not from their offices. Consequently, it was beyond the power of Chief
State Prosecutor to oppose the appeal of the COMELEC. For that matter, it was beyond his power,
as COMELEC-designated prosecutor, to leave to the trial courts the determination of whether
there was probable cause for the filing of the cases and, if it found none, whether the cases
should be dismissed.

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