Akbayan v. Aquino, G.R. No. 170516
Akbayan v. Aquino, G.R. No. 170516
Akbayan v. Aquino, G.R. No. 170516
Petitioners Congressmen Lorenzo R. Tañada III and Mario Joyo Aguja filed on
January 25, 2005 House Resolution No. 551 calling for an inquiry into the bilateral
trade agreements then being negotiated by the Philippine government, particularly
the JPEPA. The Resolution became the basis of an inquiry subsequently conducted
by the House Special Committee on Globalization (the House Committee) into the
negotiations of the JPEPA.
In the course of its inquiry, the House Committee requested herein respondent
Undersecretary Tomas Aquino (Usec. Aquino), Chairman of the Philippine
Coordinating Committee created under Executive Order No. 213 ("Creation of A
Philippine Coordinating Committee to Study the Feasibility of the Japan-Philippines
Economic Partnership Agreement")1 to study and negotiate the proposed JPEPA,
and to furnish the Committee with a copy of the latest draft of the JPEPA. Usec.
Aquino did not heed the request, however.
Congressman Aguja later requested for the same document, but Usec. Aquino, by
letter of November 2, 2005, replied that the Congressman shall be provided with a
copy thereof "once the negotiations are completed and as soon as a thorough legal
review of the proposed agreement has been conducted."
In its letter dated 15 June 2005 (copy enclosed), [the] D[epartment of] F[oreign]
A[ffairs] explains that the Committee’s request to be furnished all documents
on the JPEPA may be difficult to accomplish at this time, since the
proposed Agreement has been a work in progress for about three years. A
copy of the draft JPEPA will however be forwarded to the Committee as soon as the
text thereof is settled and complete. (Emphasis supplied)
Congressman Aguja also requested NEDA Director-General Romulo Neri and Tariff
Commission Chairman Edgardo Abon, by letter of July 1, 2005, for copies of the
latest text of the JPEPA.
Chairman Abon replied, however, by letter of July 12, 2005 that the Tariff
Commission does not have a copy of the documents being requested, albeit he was
certain that Usec. Aquino would provide the Congressman with a copy "once the
negotiation is completed." And by letter of July 18, 2005, NEDA Assistant Director-
General Margarita R. Songco informed the Congressman that his request addressed
to Director-General Neri had been forwarded to Usec. Aquino who would be "in the
best position to respond" to the request.
In its third hearing conducted on August 31, 2005, the House Committee resolved
to issue a subpoena for the most recent draft of the JPEPA, but the same was not
pursued because by Committee Chairman Congressman Teves’ information, then
House Speaker Jose de Venecia had requested him to hold in abeyance the
issuance of the subpoena until the President gives her consent to the disclosure of
the documents.3
Amid speculations that the JPEPA might be signed by the Philippine government
within December 2005, the present petition was filed on December 9, 2005.4 The
agreement was to be later signed on September 9, 2006 by President Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo and Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi in Helsinki,
Finland, following which the President endorsed it to the Senate for its concurrence
pursuant to Article VII, Section 21 of the Constitution. To date, the JPEPA is still
being deliberated upon by the Senate.
The JPEPA, which will be the first bilateral free trade agreement to be entered into
by the Philippines with another country in the event the Senate grants its consent
to it, covers a broad range of topics which respondents enumerate as follows: trade
in goods, rules of origin, customs procedures, paperless trading, trade in services,
investment, intellectual property rights, government procurement, movement of
natural persons, cooperation, competition policy, mutual recognition, dispute
avoidance and settlement, improvement of the business environment, and general
and final provisions.5
While the final text of the JPEPA has now been made accessible to the public since
September 11, 2006,6respondents do not dispute that, at the time the petition was
filed up to the filing of petitioners’ Reply – when the JPEPA was still being
negotiated – the initial drafts thereof were kept from public view.
Standing
For a petition for mandamus such as the one at bar to be given due course, it must
be instituted by a party aggrieved by the alleged inaction of any tribunal,
corporation, board or person which unlawfully excludes said party from the
enjoyment of a legal right.7 Respondents deny that petitioners have such standing
to sue. "[I]n the interest of a speedy and definitive resolution of the substantive
issues raised," however, respondents consider it sufficient to cite a portion of the
ruling in Pimentel v. Office of Executive Secretary8 which emphasizes the need for a
"personal stake in the outcome of the controversy" on questions of standing.
Mootness
Considering, however, that "[t]he principal relief petitioners are praying for is the
disclosure of the contents of the JPEPA prior to its finalization between the two
States parties,"10 public disclosure of the text of the JPEPA after its signing by the
President, during the pendency of the present petition, has been largely rendered
moot and academic.
With the Senate deliberations on the JPEPA still pending, the agreement as it now
stands cannot yet be considered as final and binding between the two States.
Article 164 of the JPEPA itself provides that the agreement does not take effect
immediately upon the signing thereof. For it must still go through the procedures
required by the laws of each country for its entry into force, viz:
Article 164
Entry into Force
This Agreement shall enter into force on the thirtieth day after the date on which
the Governments of the Parties exchange diplomatic notes informing each
other that their respective legal procedures necessary for entry into force
of this Agreement have been completed. It shall remain in force unless
terminated as provided for in Article 165.11 (Emphasis supplied)
President Arroyo’s endorsement of the JPEPA to the Senate for concurrence is part
of the legal procedures which must be met prior to the agreement’s entry into
force.
The text of the JPEPA having then been made accessible to the public, the petition
has become moot and academic to the extent that it seeks the disclosure of the
"full text" thereof.
The petition is not entirely moot, however, because petitioners seek to obtain, not
merely the text of the JPEPA, but also the Philippine and Japanese offers in the
course of the negotiations.12
A discussion of the substantive issues, insofar as they impinge on petitioners’
demand for access to the Philippine and Japanese offers, is thus in order.
Petitioners assert, first, that the refusal of the government to disclose the
documents bearing on the JPEPA negotiations violates their right to information on
matters of public concern13 and contravenes other constitutional provisions on
transparency, such as that on the policy of full public disclosure of all transactions
involving public interest.14 Second, they contend that non-disclosure of the same
documents undermines their right to effective and reasonable participation in all
levels of social, political, and economic decision-making.15 Lastly, they proffer that
divulging the contents of the JPEPA only after the agreement has been concluded
will effectively make the Senate into a mere rubber stamp of the Executive, in
violation of the principle of separation of powers.
Significantly, the grounds relied upon by petitioners for the disclosure of the latest
text of the JPEPA are, except for the last, the same as those cited for the disclosure
of the Philippine and Japanese offers.
The first two grounds relied upon by petitioners which bear on the merits of
respondents’ claim of privilege shall be discussed. The last, being purely
speculatory given that the Senate is still deliberating on the JPEPA, shall not.
To be covered by the right to information, the information sought must meet the
threshold requirement that it be a matter of public concern. Apropos is the teaching
of Legaspi v. Civil Service Commission:
From the nature of the JPEPA as an international trade agreement, it is evident that
the Philippine and Japanese offers submitted during the negotiations towards its
execution are matters of public concern. This, respondents do not dispute. They
only claim that diplomatic negotiations are covered by the doctrine of executive
privilege, thus constituting an exception to the right to information and the policy
of full public disclosure.
The documents on the proposed JPEPA as well as the text which is subject to
negotiations and legal review by the parties fall under the exceptions to the right of
access to information on matters of public concern and policy of public
disclosure. They come within the coverage of executive privilege. At the time when
the Committee was requesting for copies of such documents, the negotiations were
ongoing as they are still now and the text of the proposed JPEPA is still uncertain
and subject to change. Considering the status and nature of such documents then
and now, these are evidently covered by executive privilege consistent with existing
legal provisions and settled jurisprudence.
Practical and strategic considerations likewise counsel against the disclosure of the
"rolling texts" which may undergo radical change or portions of which may be
totally abandoned. Furthermore, the negotiations of the representatives of the
Philippines as well as of Japan must be allowed to explore alternatives in
the course of the negotiations in the same manner as judicial deliberations
and working drafts of opinions are accorded strict
confidentiality.22 (Emphasis and underscoring supplied)
The ground relied upon by respondents is thus not simply that the information
sought involves a diplomatic matter, but that it pertains to diplomatic
negotiations then in progress.
In PMPF v. Manglapus, the therein petitioners were seeking information from the
President’s representatives on the state of the then on-going negotiations of the
RP-US Military Bases Agreement.25 The Court denied the petition, stressing that
"secrecy of negotiations with foreign countries is not violative of the
constitutional provisions of freedom of speech or of the press nor of the freedom
of access to information." The Resolution went on to state, thus:
xxxx
No one who has studied the question believes that such a method of publicity is
possible. In the moment that negotiations are started, pressure groups
attempt to "muscle in." An ill-timed speech by one of the parties or a frank
declaration of the concession which are exacted or offered on both sides
would quickly lead to widespread propaganda to block the
negotiations. After a treaty has been drafted and its terms are fully
published, there is ample opportunity for discussion before it is
approved. (The New American Government and Its Works, James T. Young, 4th
Edition, p. 194) (Emphasis and underscoring supplied)
Still in PMPF v. Manglapus, the Court adopted the doctrine in U.S. v. Curtiss-Wright
Export Corp.26 that the President is the sole organ of the nation in its negotiations
with foreign countries, viz:
"x x x In this vast external realm, with its important, complicated, delicate and
manifold problems, the President alone has the power to speak or listen as a
representative of the nation. He makes treaties with the advice and consent of the
Senate; but he alone negotiates. Into the field of negotiation the Senate cannot
intrude; and Congress itself is powerless to invade it. As Marshall said in his great
argument of March 7, 1800, in the House of Representatives, "The President is
the sole organ of the nation in its external relations, and its sole
representative with foreign nations." Annals, 6th Cong., col. 613. . . (Emphasis
supplied; underscoring in the original)
Applying the principles adopted in PMPF v. Manglapus, it is clear that while the final
text of the JPEPA may not be kept perpetually confidential – since there should be
"ample opportunity for discussion before [a treaty] is approved" –
the offers exchanged by the parties during the negotiations continue to be
privileged even after the JPEPA is published. It is reasonable to conclude that the
Japanese representatives submitted their offers with the understanding that
"historic confidentiality"27 would govern the same. Disclosing these offers could
impair the ability of the Philippines to deal not only with Japan but with other
foreign governments in future negotiations.
A ruling that Philippine offers in treaty negotiations should now be open to public
scrutiny would discourage future Philippine representatives from frankly expressing
their views during negotiations. While, on first impression, it appears wise to deter
Philippine representatives from entering into compromises, it bears noting that
treaty negotiations, or any negotiation for that matter, normally involve a process
of quid pro quo, and oftentimes negotiators have to be willing to grant
concessions in an area of lesser importance in order to obtain more
favorable terms in an area of greater national interest. Apropos are the
following observations of Benjamin S. Duval, Jr.:
Whether petitioners have established the presence of such a public interest shall be
discussed later. For now, the Court shall first pass upon the arguments raised by
petitioners against the application of PMPF v. Manglapus to the present case.
Petitioners argue that PMPF v. Manglapus cannot be applied in toto to the present
case, there being substantial factual distinctions between the two.
To petitioners, the first and most fundamental distinction lies in the nature of the
treaty involved. They stress that PMPF v. Manglapus involved the Military Bases
Agreement which necessarily pertained to matters affecting national security;
whereas the present case involves an economic treaty that seeks to regulate trade
and commerce between the Philippines and Japan, matters which, unlike those
covered by the Military Bases Agreement, are not so vital to national security to
disallow their disclosure.
In the same way that the privilege for judicial deliberations does not depend on the
nature of the case deliberated upon, so presidential communications are privileged
whether they involve matters of national security.
The earlier discussion on PMPF v. Manglapus36 shows that the privilege for
diplomatic negotiations is meant to encourage a frank exchange of exploratory
ideas between the negotiating parties by shielding such negotiations from public
view. Similar to the privilege for presidential communications, the diplomatic
negotiations privilege seeks, through the same means, to protect the independence
in decision-making of the President, particularly in its capacity as "the sole organ of
the nation in its external relations, and its sole representative with foreign nations."
And, as with the deliberative process privilege, the privilege accorded to diplomatic
negotiations arises, not on account of the content of the information per se, but
because the information is part of a process of deliberation which, in pursuit of the
public interest, must be presumed confidential.
The decision of the U.S. District Court, District of Columbia in Fulbright & Jaworski
v. Department of the Treasury37enlightens on the close relation between diplomatic
negotiations and deliberative process privileges. The plaintiffs in that case sought
access to notes taken by a member of the U.S. negotiating team during the U.S.-
French tax treaty negotiations. Among the points noted therein were the issues to
be discussed, positions which the French and U.S. teams took on some points, the
draft language agreed on, and articles which needed to be amended. Upholding the
confidentiality of those notes, Judge Green ruled, thus:
The Court is not unaware that in Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL),
et al. v. Office of U.S. Trade Representative38 – where the plaintiffs sought
information relating to the just-completed negotiation of a United States-Chile Free
Trade Agreement – the same district court, this time under Judge Friedman,
consciously refrained from applying the doctrine in Fulbright and ordered the
disclosure of the information being sought.
Since the factual milieu in CIEL seemed to call for the straight application of the
doctrine in Fulbright, a discussion of why the district court did not apply the same
would help illumine this Court’s own reasons for deciding the present case along the
lines of Fulbright.
In both Fulbright and CIEL, the U.S. government cited a statutory basis for
withholding information, namely, Exemption 5 of the Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA).39 In order to qualify for protection under Exemption 5, a document must
satisfy two conditions: (1) it must be either inter-agency or intra-agency in
nature, and (2) it must be both pre-decisional and part of the agency's
deliberative or decision-making process.40
In fine, Fulbright was not overturned. The court in CIEL merely found the same to
be irrelevant in light of its distinct factual setting. Whether this conclusion was valid
– a question on which this Court would not pass – the ruling in Fulbright that
"[n]egotiations between two countries to draft a treaty represent a true example of
a deliberative process" was left standing, since the CIEL court explicitly stated that
it did not reach the question of deliberative process.
Going back to the present case, the Court recognizes that the information sought
by petitioners includes documents produced and communicated by a party external
to the Philippine government, namely, the Japanese representatives in the JPEPA
negotiations, and to that extent this case is closer to the factual circumstances
of CIEL than those of Fulbright.
Nonetheless, for reasons which shall be discussed shortly, this Court echoes the
principle articulated in Fulbright that the public policy underlying the deliberative
process privilege requires that diplomatic negotiations should also be accorded
privileged status, even if the documents subject of the present case cannot be
described as purely internal in character.
It need not be stressed that in CIEL, the court ordered the disclosure of information
based on its finding that the first requirement of FOIA Exemption 5 – that the
documents be inter-agency – was not met. In determining whether the government
may validly refuse disclosure of the exchanges between the U.S. and Chile, it
necessarily had to deal with this requirement, it being laid down by a statute
binding on them.
In this jurisdiction, however, there is no counterpart of the FOIA, nor is there any
statutory requirement similar to FOIA Exemption 5 in particular. Hence, Philippine
courts, when assessing a claim of privilege for diplomatic negotiations, are more
free to focus directly on the issue of whether the privilege being claimed is
indeed supported by public policy, without having to consider – as the CIEL court
did – if these negotiations fulfill a formal requirement of being "inter-agency."
Important though that requirement may be in the context of domestic negotiations,
it need not be accorded the same significance when dealing with international
negotiations.
There being a public policy supporting a privilege for diplomatic negotiations for the
reasons explained above, the Court sees no reason to modify, much less abandon,
the doctrine in PMPF v. Manglapus.
Petitioners thus conclude that the present case involves the right of members of
Congress to demand information on negotiations of international trade agreements
from the Executive branch, a matter which was not raised in PMPF v. Manglapus.
While indeed the petitioners in PMPF v. Manglapus consisted only of members of the
mass media, it would be incorrect to claim that the doctrine laid down therein has
no bearing on a controversy such as the present, where the demand for information
has come from members of Congress, not only from private citizens.
Clearly, the privilege for diplomatic negotiations may be invoked not only against
citizens’ demands for information, but also in the context of legislative
investigations.
As third and last point raised against the application of PMPF v. Manglapus in this
case, petitioners proffer that "the socio-political and historical contexts of the two
cases are worlds apart." They claim that the constitutional traditions and concepts
prevailing at the time PMPF v. Manglapus came about, particularly the school of
thought that the requirements of foreign policy and the ideals of transparency were
incompatible with each other or the "incompatibility hypothesis," while valid when
international relations were still governed by power, politics and wars, are no longer
so in this age of international cooperation.42
The following statement in Chavez v. PEA, however, suffices to show that the
doctrine in both that case and Chavez v. PCGG with regard to the duty to disclose
"definite propositions of the government" does not apply to diplomatic negotiations:
We rule, therefore, that the constitutional right to information includes official
information on on-going negotiations before a final contract. The information,
however, must constitute definite propositions by the government and
should not cover recognized exceptions like privileged information,
military and diplomatic secrets and similar matters affecting national
security and public order. x x x46 (Emphasis and underscoring supplied)
It follows from this ruling that even definite propositions of the government may
not be disclosed if they fall under "recognized exceptions." The privilege for
diplomatic negotiations is clearly among the recognized exceptions, for the footnote
to the immediately quoted ruling cites PMPF v. Manglapus itself as an authority.
To clarify, there are at least two kinds of public interest that must be taken into
account. One is the presumed public interest in favor of keeping the subject
information confidential, which is the reason for the privilege in the first place,
and the other is the public interest in favor of disclosure, the existence of which
must be shown by the party asking for information. 47
xxxx
Petitioners have failed to present the strong and "sufficient showing of need"
referred to in the immediately cited cases. The arguments they proffer to establish
their entitlement to the subject documents fall short of this standard.
Whether it can accurately be said that the Filipino people were not involved in the
JPEPA negotiations is a question of fact which this Court need not resolve. Suffice it
to state that respondents had presented documents purporting to show that public
consultations were conducted on the JPEPA. Parenthetically, petitioners consider
these "alleged consultations" as "woefully selective and inadequate."53
AT ALL EVENTS, since it is not disputed that the offers exchanged by the Philippine
and Japanese representatives have not been disclosed to the public, the Court shall
pass upon the issue of whether access to the documents bearing on them is, as
petitioners claim, essential to their right to participate in decision-making.
The case for petitioners has, of course, been immensely weakened by the disclosure
of the full text of the JPEPA to the public since September 11, 2006, even as it is
still being deliberated upon by the Senate and, therefore, not yet binding on the
Philippines. Were the Senate to concur with the validity of the JPEPA at this
moment, there has already been, in the words of PMPF v. Manglapus, "ample
opportunity for discussion before [the treaty] is approved."
The text of the JPEPA having been published, petitioners have failed to convince
this Court that they will not be able to meaningfully exercise their right to
participate in decision-making unless the initial offers are also published.
The subject of Article VI Section 28(2) of the Constitution is not the power to
negotiate treaties and international agreements, but the power to fix tariff rates,
import and export quotas, and other taxes. Thus it provides:
(2) The Congress may, by law, authorize the President to fix within specified limits,
and subject to such limitations and restrictions as it may impose, tariff rates, import
and export quotas, tonnage and wharfage dues, and other duties or imposts within
the framework of the national development program of the Government.
The doctrine in PMPF v. Manglapus that the treaty-making power is exclusive to the
President, being the sole organ of the nation in its external relations, was echoed
in BAYAN v. Executive Secretary56 where the Court held:
By constitutional fiat and by the intrinsic nature of his office, the President, as head
of State, is the sole organ and authority in the external affairs of the country. In
many ways, the President is the chief architect of the nation's foreign policy; his
"dominance in the field of foreign relations is (then) conceded." Wielding vast
powers and influence, his conduct in the external affairs of the nation, as Jefferson
describes, is "executive altogether."
The same doctrine was reiterated even more recently in Pimentel v. Executive
Secretary57 where the Court ruled:
In our system of government, the President, being the head of state, is regarded
as the sole organ and authority in external relations and is the country's
sole representative with foreign nations. As the chief architect of foreign
policy, the President acts as the country's mouthpiece with respect to international
affairs. Hence, the President is vested with the authority to deal with foreign
states and governments, extend or withhold recognition, maintain diplomatic
relations, enter into treaties, and otherwise transact the business of foreign
relations. In the realm of treaty-making, the President has the sole
authority to negotiate with other states.
Nonetheless, while the President has the sole authority to negotiate and
enter into treaties, the Constitution provides a limitation to his power by
requiring the concurrence of 2/3 of all the members of the Senate for
the validity of the treaty entered into by him. x x x (Emphasis and
underscoring supplied)
While the power then to fix tariff rates and other taxes clearly belongs to Congress,
and is exercised by the President only by delegation of that body, it has long been
recognized that the power to enter into treaties is vested directly and exclusively in
the President, subject only to the concurrence of at least two-thirds of all the
Members of the Senate for the validity of the treaty. In this light, the authority of
the President to enter into trade agreements with foreign nations provided under
P.D. 146458 may be interpreted as an acknowledgment of a power already inherent
in its office. It may not be used as basis to hold the President or its representatives
accountable to Congress for the conduct of treaty negotiations.
This is not to say, of course, that the President’s power to enter into treaties is
unlimited but for the requirement of Senate concurrence, since the President must
still ensure that all treaties will substantively conform to all the relevant provisions
of the Constitution.
It follows from the above discussion that Congress, while possessing vast legislative
powers, may not interfere in the field of treaty negotiations. While Article VII,
Section 21 provides for Senate concurrence, such pertains only to the validity of the
treaty under consideration, not to the conduct of negotiations attendant to its
conclusion. Moreover, it is not even Congress as a whole that has been given the
authority to concur as a means of checking the treaty-making power of the
President, but only the Senate.
That respondents invoked the privilege for the first time only in their Comment to
the present petition does not mean that the claim of privilege should not be
credited. Petitioners’ position presupposes that an assertion of the privilege should
have been made during the House Committee investigations, failing which
respondents are deemed to have waived it.
Respondents’ failure to claim the privilege during the House Committee hearings
may not, however, be construed as a waiver thereof by the Executive branch. As
the immediately preceding paragraph indicates, what respondents received from
the House Committee and petitioner-Congressman Aguja were mere requests for
information. And as priorly stated, the House Committee itself refrained from
pursuing its earlier resolution to issue a subpoena duces tecum on account of then
Speaker Jose de Venecia’s alleged request to Committee Chairperson Congressman
Teves to hold the same in abeyance.
While it is a salutary and noble practice for Congress to refrain from issuing
subpoenas to executive officials – out of respect for their office – until resort to it
becomes necessary, the fact remains that such requests are not a compulsory
process. Being mere requests, they do not strictly call for an assertion of executive
privilege.
The Court observes, however, that the claim of privilege appearing in respondents’
Comment to this petition fails to satisfy in full the requirement laid down in Senate
v. Ermita that the claim should be invoked by the President or through the
Executive Secretary "by order of the President."60 Respondents’ claim of privilege is
being sustained, however, its flaw notwithstanding, because of circumstances
peculiar to the case.
The assertion of executive privilege by the Executive Secretary, who is one of the
respondents herein, without him adding the phrase "by order of the President,"
shall be considered as partially complying with the requirement laid down in Senate
v. Ermita. The requirement that the phrase "by order of the President" should
accompany the Executive Secretary’s claim of privilege is a new rule laid down for
the first time in Senate v. Ermita, which was not yet final and executory at the time
respondents filed their Comment to the petition.61 A strict application of this
requirement would thus be unwarranted in this case.
We are aware that behind the dissent of the Chief Justice lies a genuine zeal to
protect our people’s right to information against any abuse of executive privilege. It
is a zeal that We fully share.
The Court, however, in its endeavor to guard against the abuse of executive
privilege, should be careful not to veer towards the opposite extreme, to the point
that it would strike down as invalid even a legitimate exercise thereof.
We respond only to the salient arguments of the Dissenting Opinion which have not
yet been sufficiently addressed above.
1. After its historical discussion on the allocation of power over international trade
agreements in the United States, the dissent concludes that "it will be turning
somersaults with history to contend that the President is the sole organ for external
relations" in that jurisdiction. With regard to this opinion, We make only the
following observations:
There is, at least, a core meaning of the phrase "sole organ of the nation in its
external relations" which is not being disputed, namely, that the power
to directly negotiate treaties and international agreements is vested by our
Constitution only in the Executive. Thus, the dissent states that "Congress has the
power to regulate commerce with foreign nations but does not have the power
to negotiate international agreements directly."62
On the other hand, We hold that this is one occasion where the following ruling
in Agan v. PIATCO63 – and in other cases both before and since – should be applied:
This Court has long and consistently adhered to the legal maxim that those
that cannot be done directly cannot be done indirectly. To declare the PIATCO
contracts valid despite the clear statutory prohibition against a direct government
guarantee would not only make a mockery of what the BOT Law seeks to prevent --
which is to expose the government to the risk of incurring a monetary obligation
resulting from a contract of loan between the project proponent and its lenders and
to which the Government is not a party to -- but would also render the BOT Law
useless for what it seeks to achieve –- to make use of the resources of the private
sector in the "financing, operation and maintenance of infrastructure and
development projects" which are necessary for national growth and development
but which the government, unfortunately, could ill-afford to finance at this point in
time.64
What the U.S. Constitution sought to prevent and aimed to achieve in defining the
treaty-making power of the President, which our Constitution similarly defines, may
be gathered from Hamilton’s explanation of why the U.S. Constitution excludes the
House of Representatives from the treaty-making process:
x x x The fluctuating, and taking its future increase into account, the multitudinous
composition of that body, forbid us to expect in it those qualities which are
essential to the proper execution of such a trust. Accurate and comprehensive
knowledge of foreign politics; a steady and systematic adherence to the same
views; a nice and uniform sensibility to national character,
decision, secrecy and dispatch; are incompatible with a body so variable and so
numerous. The very complication of the business by introducing a necessity of the
concurrence of so many different bodies, would of itself afford a solid objection. The
greater frequency of the calls upon the house of representatives, and the greater
length of time which it would often be necessary to keep them together when
convened, to obtain their sanction in the progressive stages of a treaty, would be
source of so great inconvenience and expense, as alone ought to condemn the
project.65
2. The dissent also asserts that respondents can no longer claim the diplomatic
secrets privilege over the subject JPEPA documents now that negotiations have
been concluded, since their reasons for nondisclosure cited in the June 23, 2005
letter of Sec. Ermita, and later in their Comment, necessarily apply only for as long
as the negotiations were still pending;
The House Committee that initiated the investigations on the JPEPA did not pursue
its earlier intention to subpoena the documents. This strongly undermines the
assertion that access to the same documents by the House Committee is critical to
the performance of its legislative functions. If the documents were indeed critical,
the House Committee should have, at the very least, issued a subpoena duces
tecum or, like what the Senate did in Senate v. Ermita, filed the present petition as
a legislative body, rather than leaving it to the discretion of individual Congressmen
whether to pursue an action or not. Such acts would have served as strong indicia
that Congress itself finds the subject information to be critical to its legislative
functions.
Furthermore, from the time the final text of the JPEPA including its annexes and
attachments was published, petitioner-members of the House of Representatives
have been free to use it for any legislative purpose they may see fit. Since such
publication, petitioners’ need, if any, specifically for the Philippine and Japanese
offers leading to the final version of the JPEPA, has become even less apparent.
In asserting that the balance in this instance tilts in favor of disclosing the JPEPA
documents, the dissent contends that the Executive has failed to show how
disclosing them after the conclusion of negotiations would impair the performance
of its functions. The contention, with due respect, misplaces the onus probandi.
While, in keeping with the general presumption of transparency, the burden is
initially on the Executive to provide precise and certain reasons for upholding its
claim of privilege, once the Executive is able to show that the documents being
sought are covered by a recognized privilege, the burden shifts to the party seeking
information to overcome the privilege by a strong showing of need.
When it was thus established that the JPEPA documents are covered by the
privilege for diplomatic negotiations pursuant to PMPF v. Manglapus, the
presumption arose that their disclosure would impair the performance of executive
functions. It was then incumbent on petitioner- requesting parties to show that they
have a strong need for the information sufficient to overcome the privilege. They
have not, however.
When the Court in Senate v. Ermita limited the power of invoking the privilege to
the President alone, it was laying down a new rule for which there is no counterpart
even in the United States from which the concept of executive privilege was
adopted. As held in the 2004 case of Judicial Watch, Inc. v. Department of
Justice,69 citing In re Sealed Case,70 "the issue of whether a President must
personally invoke the [presidential communications] privilege remains an open
question." U.S. v. Reynolds,71 on the other hand, held that "[t]here must be a
formal claim of privilege, lodged by the head of the department which has control
over the matter, after actual personal consideration by that officer."
The rule was thus laid down by this Court, not in adherence to any established
precedent, but with the aim of preventing the abuse of the privilege in light of its
highly exceptional nature. The Court’s recognition that the Executive Secretary also
bears the power to invoke the privilege, provided he does so "by order of the
President," is meant to avoid laying down too rigid a rule, the Court being aware
that it was laying down a new restriction on executive privilege. It is with the same
spirit that the Court should not be overly strict with applying the same rule in this
peculiar instance, where the claim of executive privilege occurred before the
judgment in Senate v. Ermita became final.
5. To show that PMPF v. Manglapus may not be applied in the present case, the
dissent implies that the Court therein erred in citing US v. Curtiss Wright72 and the
book entitled The New American Government and Its Work73since these authorities,
so the dissent claims, may not be used to calibrate the importance of the right to
information in the Philippine setting.
The dissent argues that since Curtiss-Wright referred to a conflict between the
executive and legislative branches of government, the factual setting thereof was
different from that of PMPF v. Manglapus which involved a collision between
governmental power over the conduct of foreign affairs and the citizen’s right to
information.
That the Court could freely cite Curtiss-Wright – a case that upholds the secrecy of
diplomatic negotiations against congressional demands for information – in the
course of laying down a ruling on the public right to information only serves to
underscore the principle mentioned earlier that the privileged character accorded to
diplomatic negotiations does not ipso facto lose all force and effect simply because
the same privilege is now being claimed under different circumstances.
PMPF v. Manglapus indeed involved a demand for information from private citizens
and not an executive-legislative conflict, but so did Chavez v. PEA74 which held that
"the [public’s] right to information . . . does not extend to matters recognized as
privileged information under the separation of powers." What counts as privileged
information in an executive-legislative conflict is thus also recognized as such in
cases involving the public’s right to information.
Chavez v. PCGG75 also involved the public’s right to information, yet the Court
recognized as a valid limitation to that right the same privileged information based
on separation of powers – closed-door Cabinet meetings, executive sessions of
either house of Congress, and the internal deliberations of the Supreme Court.
These cases show that the Court has always regarded claims of privilege, whether
in the context of an executive-legislative conflict or a citizen’s demand for
information, as closely intertwined, such that the principles applicable to one are
also applicable to the other.
Absurdity would be the ultimate result if, for instance, the Court adopts the "clear
and present danger" test for the assessment of claims of privilege against citizens’
demands for information. If executive information, when demanded by a citizen, is
privileged only when there is a clear and present danger of a substantive evil that
the State has a right to prevent, it would be very difficult for the Executive to
establish the validity of its claim in each instance. In contrast, if the demand comes
from Congress, the Executive merely has to show that the information is covered
by a recognized privilege in order to shift the burden on Congress to present a
strong showing of need. This would lead to a situation where it would be more
difficult for Congress to access executive information than it would be for private
citizens.
We maintain then that when the Executive has already shown that an information is
covered by executive privilege, the party demanding the information must present
a "strong showing of need," whether that party is Congress or a private citizen.
The rule that the same "showing of need" test applies in both these contexts,
however, should not be construed as a denial of the importance of analyzing the
context in which an executive privilege controversy may happen to be placed.
Rather, it affirms it, for it means that the specific need being shown by the party
seeking information in every particular instance is highly significant in determining
whether to uphold a claim of privilege. This "need" is, precisely, part of the
context in light of which every claim of privilege should be assessed.
Since, as demonstrated above, there are common principles that should be applied
to executive privilege controversies across different contexts, the Court in PMPF v.
Manglapus did not err when it cited the Curtiss-Wrightcase.
The claim that the book cited in PMPF v. Manglapus entitled The New American
Government and Its Work could not have taken into account the expanded
statutory right to information in the FOIA assumes that the observations in that
book in support of the confidentiality of treaty negotiations would be different had it
been written after the FOIA. Such assumption is, with due respect, at best,
speculative.
As to the claim in the dissent that "[i]t is more doubtful if the same book be used to
calibrate the importance of the right of access to information in the Philippine
setting considering its elevation as a constitutional right," we submit that the
elevation of such right as a constitutional right did not set it free from the
legitimate restrictions of executive privilege which is itself constitutionally-
based.76 Hence, the comments in that book which were cited in PMPF v.
Manglapus remain valid doctrine.
6. The dissent further asserts that the Court has never used "need" as a test to
uphold or allow inroads into rights guaranteed under the Constitution. With due
respect, we assert otherwise. The Court has done so before, albeit without using
the term "need."
Given that the dissent has clarified that it does not seek to apply the "clear and
present danger" test to the present controversy, but the balancing test, there
seems to be no substantial dispute between the position laid down in
this ponencia and that reflected in the dissent as to what test to apply. It would
appear that the only disagreement is on the results of applying that test in this
instance.
The dissent, nonetheless, maintains that "it suffices that information is of public
concern for it to be covered by the right, regardless of the public’s need for the
information," and that the same would hold true even "if they simply want to know
it because it interests them." As has been stated earlier, however, there is no
dispute that the information subject of this case is a matter of public concern. The
Court has earlier concluded that it is a matter of public concern, not on the basis of
any specific need shown by petitioners, but from the very nature of the JPEPA as an
international trade agreement.
However, when the Executive has – as in this case – invoked the privilege, and it
has been established that the subject information is indeed covered by the privilege
being claimed, can a party overcome the same by merely asserting that the
information being demanded is a matter of public concern, without any further
showing required? Certainly not, for that would render the doctrine of executive
privilege of no force and effect whatsoever as a limitation on the right to
information, because then the sole test in such controversies would be whether an
information is a matter of public concern.
Thus, the Court holds that, in determining whether an information is covered by the
right to information, a specific "showing of need" for such information is not a
relevant consideration, but only whether the same is a matter of public concern.
When, however, the government has claimed executive privilege, and it has
established that the information is indeed covered by the same, then the party
demanding it, if it is to overcome the privilege, must show that that the information
is vital, not simply for the satisfaction of its curiosity, but for its ability to effectively
and reasonably participate in social, political, and economic decision-making.79
7. The dissent maintains that "[t]he treaty has thus entered the ultimate stage
where the people can exercise their right to participate in the discussion whether
the Senate should concur in its ratification or not." (Emphasis supplied) It adds that
this right "will be diluted unless the people can have access to the subject JPEPA
documents". What, to the dissent, is a dilution of the right to participate in
decision-making is, to Us, simply a recognition of the qualified nature of the public’s
right to information. It is beyond dispute that the right to information is not
absolute and that the doctrine of executive privilege is a recognized limitation on
that right.
Thus, we hold that the balance in this case tilts in favor of executive privilege.
8. Against our ruling that the principles applied in U.S. v. Nixon, the Senate Select
Committee case, and In re Sealed Case, are similarly applicable to the present
controversy, the dissent cites the caveat in the Nixon case that the U.S. Court was
there addressing only the President’s assertion of privilege in the context of a
criminal trial, not a civil litigation nor a congressional demand for information. What
this caveat means, however, is only that courts must be careful not to hastily apply
the ruling therein to other contexts. It does not, however, absolutely mean that the
principles applied in that case may never be applied in such contexts.
Hence, U.S. courts have cited U.S. v. Nixon in support of their rulings on claims of
executive privilege in contexts other than a criminal trial, as in the case of Nixon v.
Administrator of General Services80 – which involved former President Nixon’s
invocation of executive privilege to challenge the constitutionality of the
"Presidential Recordings and Materials Preservation Act"81 – and the above-
mentioned In re Sealed Case which involved a claim of privilege against a subpoena
duces tecum issued in a grand jury investigation.
Indeed, in applying to the present case the principles found in U.S. v. Nixon and in
the other cases already mentioned, We are merely affirming what the Chief Justice
stated in his Dissenting Opinion in Neri v. Senate Committee on Accountability82 – a
case involving an executive-legislative conflict over executive privilege. That
dissenting opinion stated that, while Nixon was not concerned with the balance
between the President’s generalized interest in confidentiality and congressional
demands for information, "[n]onetheless the [U.S.] Court laid down principles
and procedures that can serve as torch lights to illumine us on the scope
and use of Presidential communication privilege in the case at bar."83 While
the Court was divided in Neri, this opinion of the Chief Justice was not among the
points of disagreement, and We similarly hold now that the Nixon case is a useful
guide in the proper resolution of the present controversy, notwithstanding the
difference in context.
Verily, while the Court should guard against the abuse of executive
privilege, it should also give full recognition to the validity of the privilege
whenever it is claimed within the proper bounds of executive power, as in
this case. Otherwise, the Court would undermine its own credibility, for it would be
perceived as no longer aiming to strike a balance, but seeking merely to water
down executive privilege to the point of irrelevance.
Conclusion
Diplomatic negotiations have, since the Court promulgated its Resolution in PMPF v.
Manglapus on September 13, 1988, been recognized as privileged in this
jurisdiction and the reasons proffered by petitioners against the application of the
ruling therein to the present case have not persuaded the Court. Moreover,
petitioners – both private citizens and members of the House of Representatives –
have failed to present a "sufficient showing of need" to overcome the claim of
privilege in this case.
That the privilege was asserted for the first time in respondents’ Comment to the
present petition, and not during the hearings of the House Special Committee on
Globalization, is of no moment, since it cannot be interpreted as a waiver of the
privilege on the part of the Executive branch.
For reasons already explained, this Decision shall not be interpreted as departing
from the ruling in Senate v. Ermitathat executive privilege should be invoked by the
President or through the Executive Secretary "by order of the President."
SO ORDERED.