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[BOARD OP ELECTION INSPECTORS FOR SECOND PRECINCT OP BOÑGABON v. PEDRO MA. SISON](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c1d8c?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. 35773, Aug 06, 1931 ]

BOARD OP ELECTION INSPECTORS FOR SECOND PRECINCT OP BOÑGABON v. PEDRO MA. SISON +

DECISION

55 Phil. 914

[ G. R. No. 35773, August 06, 1931 ]

THE BOARD OP ELECTION INSPECTORS FOR THE SECOND PRECINCT OP BOÑGABON, MINDORO (REPRESENTED BY A MAJORITY CONSISTING OF JOSE AGUILAR, CHAIRMAN, AND DEMETRIO CASAPAO, INSPECTOR), AND ARTURO A. IGNACIO, PETITIONERS, VS. PEDRO MA. SISON, JUDGE OF FIRST INSTANCE OF MINDORO, THE PROVINCIAL BOARD OF CANVASSERS OP MINDORO (COMPRISING THE PROVINCIAL TREASURER DOMINGO OLOROSO, PRESIDENT, THE PROVINCIAL FISCAL CATALINO CAILIPAN, AND CAPTAIN ELADIO LASAM, P. C, MEMBERS) AND JUAN NAVARRO, RESPONDENTS.

D E C I S I O N

VILLAMOR, J.:

This is an original  petition for a  writ  of  mandamus against the Judge of the Court of First Instance of Mindoro requiring him to proceed with the  hearing of the petition filed by the two election inspectors of precinct No. 2 of the municipality of Boñgabon, taking all the  relevant evidence of the case and deciding it  upon  the merits,  and for a preliminary mandatory  injunction  against the provincial board of canvassers  of that  province requiring them  to abstain from making the canvass with only the incomplete inspectors' statement,  but to take  into  account the  four copies of said  statement, or  the amended statement as authorized by the court below.

This case was argued by the parties together with that which is the subject matter of our decision in G. R.  No. 35800 1;  but, for the sake of greater clearness, we prefer to render a separate decision.

After  the court  below had ruled  upon  the  inspectors' petition  to  correct the election  returns of that precinct forwarded to the provincial  treasurer,  and before the bill of exceptions had been filed, the petitioners instituted these mandamus proceedings.

Although  the petitioners affirm in their printed argument that the  answer  of the provincial board of canvassers admits  all  the facts  alleged  in the petition, the  amended answer of the respondents herein, the  judge of the Court of First  Instance and others, deny the  facts set out in the petition for  mandamus, with  the exception of those expressly or impliedly  admitted  therein, and  in addition, set up certain special defenses.  But since no evidence was  adduced to prove the petitioners' allegations which  were denied by  the respondents, the  present  discussion may be limited to the points of law raised  by the petitioners, to wit:
May the Judge of the Court of First Instance of Mindoro be compelled by mandamus to decide the election inspectors' petition to correct their returns a certain way, under section 465  of  the Election Law?

Will a  prohibitory injunction lie to compel the provincial board of canvassers  of Mindoro to refrain from making the canvass without taking into  account all four of  the copies of the returns, or the amended returns as authorized by the lower court?
In view of the decision in  case G. R.  No. 35800, we shall now decide  these questions,  taking for granted the lower court's denial of the petitioners' prayer to amend the election returns forwarded to the provincial treasurer.

With respect to the mandamus against the court below, the matter may be decided in accordance with the court's opinion as expressed in  the aforementioned case G. R. No. 35800 regarding the petition for the correction of the election returns.   That is to say, if the Judge of the Court of First Instance of Mindoro, by virtue of the last clause of section 465  of the  Election  Law,  may  grant or deny  a petition to correct election returns, the writ of mandamus applied for will not lie.

The clause of section  465 of the  Election  Law, relevant to  the point in question provides the following:
"After the said proclamation, no changes or amendments shall be made by the board of  inspectors in such certificates of votes, unless so  ordered by a competent court."
It is clear from the  terms  of this  provision that the judge of the Court of First Instance may order the correction of returns, when so prayed for by the election inspectors, but there is nothing in  the law to  indicate that the judge  must  of necessity  order such correction.  As we held in case G. R. No. 35800,  recently decided, "The power to order the correction of election returns, vested by law in the courts,  is  discretionary; it is  an administrative and supervisory power  intended to secure correctness  in the amendment of such returns.   Rulings made  in  pursuance of this power, granting or denying  the petition to correct, are interlocutory in nature."   This being so, the respondent judge  cannot be  compelled to use his  discretion to decide a certain way, admitting evidence upon the incident in order to decide the same upon its merits.  The record shows that  in  order to  resolve the petition  for authority to correct the election returns in question, the respondent judge heard both parties and took into account their pleadings and the exhibits attached both to the petition and to the objection thereto interposed by the  intervenor, Juan Navarro.  We  believe that within the limits  of  that summary proceeding,  the respondent  judge  had everything before him  needed for  the use of his  sound discretion, deciding that there was no merit in the petition, and therefore he denied it.

This court has recently ruled that the lower court's denial of the protestants' petition is unappealable.  To grant the petition now, compelling the respondent judge to admit evidence regarding  the incident and to decide  the  same upon its merits, would be equivalent to authorizing a  dilatory proceeding contrary to  the summary nature of the aforesaid incident and to the policy of the law in requiring that the  proclamation of the election results with reference to provincial and insular  officials  be made within thirty days following the election.

It is contended that the respondent judge erred in applying to the present case the doctrine laid down by the majority of this court in  Benitez  vs.  Paredes and Dizon (52 Phil., 1).  Assuming the respondent judge did err in this point, we are of the opinion that such an error cannot be  corrected by mandamus.   In  that case the majority of the court held that the consent of the inspectors to the correction was necessary in order that the court might grant the authority requested.  It is now argued that the two plaintiff-inspectors, composing the majority of the board, may ask for the correction  of  the returns in question, disregarding the other inspector who took no part in the preparation of said  returns.  We believe the majority of the board may petition the court for authority to correct the returns without the consent  of the other inspector, if the latter does  not object.  But in the case before us, the third inspector, according to intervenor Navarro, objects to the correction of the returns on the ground that  the two inspectors of the  majority party committed irregularities in the preparation of the inspectors  statements  in  that precinct, by including therein an arbitrary number of votes for the office of provincial governor.  This necessarily demands the production of evidence.  And inasmuch as, according  to the  respondent, the other election returns will not be sufficient, for they also contain an arbitrary number of votes for the office of provincial governor, recourse would have to be had to the ballot boxes for an examination of the ballots, and the incident would thereby be converted into a real election contest.

The petitioners cite in support of their contention the cases of De Castro vs. Salas and Santiago  (34 Phil., 813) and  Galang  vs.  Miranda  and  De  Leon  (35 Phil.,  269, and 36 Phil., 316).  The doctrines laid down in these cases are, however, inapplicable to the present issue.   The cases cited  dealt with the dismissal of a protest without discussing the merits.  The ruling in these cases is:  If a judge dismisses an election contest upon purely technical grounds, which do not affect the merits of the case or the jurisdiction of the court, mandamus will lie to compel him to reinstate the case and decide it upon  its merits.  The present case does not deal with an  election contest, but merely an incident, requesting authority to correct certain election returns.  The decision of this incident is not a final decision upon the number of votes obtained by the candidates for the office of provincial governor.  This question must  be decided by an election contest.  And the court below having acted within its  discretionary powers in ruling  upon that incident,  mandamus will not lie.  The general rule should here be followed, that mandamus will not issue  to control the discretion of an officer or a court, exercised  honorably and without  abuse thereof.

In  conclusion,  therefore, the  writ of  mandamus prayed for against the Judge of the Court of First Instance  of Mindoro will not lie.

With  regard  to the mandatory injunction prayed for against the provincial board of canvassers of that province, requiring them to refrain from considering the  election returns forwarded to the provincial treasurer, but to consider in their canvass the copies of the  returns forwarded to the Executive  Bureau and the municipal treasurer of the municipality of Boñgabon, or the returns as corrected  by order of the court, suffice it to bear in mind the  provisions of section 469 of  the  Election Law.  According to this section, it is a ministerial duty of said provincial board of canvassers to examine all the statements sent to the provincial treasurer, and the court having denied the petition for the correction  of the returns sent to the  provincial treasurer (G. R. No. 35800),  said provincial board of canvassers cannot be compelled to take into account the copies of the election returns forwarded to the municipal treasurer of Boñgabon and to the chief of the Executive Bureau.

The petition is dismissed  with  costs against  the  petitioners, without prejudice to their right to raise  before the trial court within the proper election contest, the question of the number of votes cast for the office of provincial governor in precinct No. 2 of the municipality of Boñgabon. And by virtue hereof,  the writ of preliminary  injunction issued by this court on the 27th of June, 1931, against the provincial board  of canvassers of Mindoro is  hereby vacated, and immediately after the promulgation of this decision said board is ordered to  meet and make recount of all the votes cast for the office of provincial governor of Mindoro, and to make the proper proclamation.  So ordered.

Street, and Malcolm, JJ., concur.

AVANCEÑA, C. J:

I concur in the result.

JOHNSON, J.:

I reserve my vote.

IMPERIAL, J.:

I concur in the dismissal of the petition.



1 Aguilar  and Casapao vs. Navarro,  p. 898, ante.



DISSENTING

ROMUALDEZ, J.:

As I understand the decision appealed from, the judge a quo denied the petition which originated this case on the ground that the first proposition of the intervenor is well taken, namely, that the court below had no jurisdiction of the subject matter since  the  petitioners did not constitute the board of inspectors, and  for this reason the court did not permit the case to take its course or the parties to produce their evidence.  I believe  this to be an  error,  because I understand that the two petitioners, the only election inspectors interested in the correction of  the copy  of the election returns sent to  the provincial treasurer, the other inspector, Gervasio Umali, took no part in the preparation of said returns and did not sign them, constitute the board of inspectors for the purposes of the remedy provided in section 465 of the Election Law.

Wherefore,  it seems to me  the court below, should have decided the petition upon the merits, according to the evidence  and in conformity with  the  law.



DISSENTING

VILLA-REAL, J.:

I regret to have to dissent from the majority opinion for the following reasons:

According to  the last paragraph of section 421  of the Election Law, "The board of inspectors shall  act through its chairman upon a majority vote of the members, the poll clerk having  neither voice nor vote in  its proceedings." One of the functions of the board of election inspectors is to prepare a statement of the votes and to certify the result, according to section 465 of said law.  Under section 421 quoted above, the board of inspectors may validly and legally perform this act through a majority vote of the members. If the vote of a majority of the members of a board  of inspectors is sufficient  to validate the exercise  of their function of preparing a statement and certifying the result of a count of votes, there is no legal reason to  prevent this same  majority  from requesting the authority of a competent court to  amend a statement prepared and signed  by said majority.  In using the  phrase "board of inspectors" in connection with the  amendment or alteration of the certificate of votes, the law does not mean all the members of which it is composed, for in section 421 it provides that the board of inspectors shall  act upon  a majority vote of  its members.

If the law considers  the official acts of a majority of the members of  the  board of inspectors as the official acts of  the board  itself, the petition to amend the  returns filed by such a majority is a petition filed by the board.  If this is so, the petition for permission filed by the petitioners, who composed a majority of the board of election inspectors for precinct No. 2 of Boñgabon, is a petition of the board itself, and therefore the respondent  judge acquired jurisdiction to take cognizance of said petition.

If the respondent judge had jurisdiction to take cognizance of the petition for permission to amend the certificate of votes in question, was it within his discretion to exercise such jurisdiction or not?  The majority is of opinion that it was.  With all  due respect, I believe that opinion 5s erroneous.  When  the  intervention of a court is invoked by an interested party, it having jurisdiction over the plaintiff and  the subject matter, such court, as an  institution established by  law for  the administration of justice, is legally bound to exercise  such jurisdiction, unless it is within the discretion of the court whether it will take jurisdiction of a case.  (15 Corpus Juris, 816, section 116.)

The implied authority granted by law to the board of inspectors to amend the certificate of votes upon being judicially ordered to do for implies a command to the competent courts to take cognizance of a petition for permission duly filed with them by said  board.

The respondent  judge denied  the plaintiffs' petition to amend for lack of merit upon the ground that he had no jurisdiction of the petition, inasmuch as it was not signed by  all the members of the board of inspectors,  but only by a majority thereof, the third or remaining member having opposed the petition, which opposition, in the opinion of the aforesaid respondent judge, upheld by the  majority oi the court, makes the case a contentious one.  Following this theory, so long as a member of the board of inspectors refuses to sign a petition to amend or opposes said petition, the Court of First Instance where it is filed cannot acquire jurisdiction, and the purposes of the law authorizing such an amendment through a judicial order, to annul election contests arising from  errors, committed by boards of Inspectors in preparing the statements and certificate of the result of the count, would become nugatory.  Inasmuch as the ballot boxes cannot be opened unless in the course of an  election  contest it becomes  necessary to examine  the ballots,  according to  the provisions of section  468 of  the Election Law (Rafols vs. Court of First Instance and Fiscal of Cebu, 47 Phil., 736), the amendment of a certificate of votes can only  be authorized when there is no need  of resorting to the ballot boxes to do so.  The opposition of one member of the board is therefore no bar to amending a certificate of votes, if, after  hearing the evidence, the judge should be of opinion  that the amendment can and may be made without the need of opening the ballot boxes.

Briefly, then,  as the act of the  majority of the board of inspectors for precinct No.  2 of Boñgabon in signing and filing the petition for permission to amend the copy of  the certificate of votes sent  to  the  provincial treasurer so as to conform  with the copy sent to the Executive Bureau, was an act  of the board of inspectors as a body, the  respondent judge had jurisdiction to hear said petition; and since it is his ministerial duty to exercise his jurisdiction when such a petition  is properly presented, and having refused to do so, he failed to comply with his ministerial duty and  may be compelled to do so  through the extraordinary legal remedy of  mandamus.

Therefore, the  writ of  mandamus applied  for  should issue.

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