1. Prior to payment - may the expropriator be placed in possession of property?
(Republic v. Lim)
         1. Bond is just a security - how much bond should be deposited if not LGU -
            under rule 67 (100% of assessed value for tax purposes)
         2. Sec. 19 LGC - how much bond should be posted or deposited? 15% of FMV
            of property sought to be expropriated if the LGU is expropriator as
            appearing on tax deck
b. Who determines or fixes just compensation?
         1. EPZA v. Dulay - encroachment on judicial prerogative
         2. PDs - courts retained discretion - did the SC agree that the PDs involve a
            discretion?
         3. The options presented by PDs - do they involve any exercise of any
            discretion at all? 
         4. For how long should the government pay the just compensation? (general
            rule: non payment of jc regardless of duration of time that elapsed - will
            not entitle property owner to recover physical possession) the remedy is?
            (demand payment)
         5. When do we apply the exception the case of republic v. lim? (the
            expropriator failed to pay full value of jc and expressly or impliedly public
            use of the property)
         6. Why not reversion of ownership? (Republic v. Lim - the exception to the
            general rule)
                1. Supposing expropriate property of A - national highway - after
                    finality of order - just compensation paid - 5 years passed, no
                    construction - can A demand reversion? (If the government failed
                    to pay within 5 years from the finality of the order directing
                    payment of jc and there is an express or implied abandonment of
                    the public use of the property - government should return - if there
                    is no express or implied abandonment of the property despite the
                    lapse of 5 years - government not required to return - only
                    recourse is to demand payment of jc or impose interest)
                2. (additional sa answer lang ‘to: expropriation order may provide
                    expressly that gov’t has only x number of year)
     ii.    Why 5 years? For how long may a final order be executed from the finality
            through mere motion? (final judgments can only be executed within 5
            years through motion - after lapse - revival of judgment)
    iii.    May the doctrine of state immunity repel any action for payment of just
            compensation?
                1. Amigable  v. Cuenca
b. Power of eminent domain can also be delegated
      i.    Can be delegated to private entities - insofar as LGUs requisites? (City of
            Paranaque Case)
     ii.    Resolution was passed - is that substantial compliance? (Just a unilateral
            act of local legislative council) 
    iii.    What is the reason why when it is compared to the power of eminent
            domain - authority of LGU is restrictive? (Delegated power - must comply
            strictly with the delegation)
                                                                                       1
Oct. 1, 2020 - Called: 10
   1.  What is taxation?
              1. Aside from taxes - the government levies fees, what’s the difference?
                     1. Objective of fees? – taxes collected for revenue purposes; fees – to
                         defray the cost of regulation
          ii.    (Amount of taxes may go beyond - fees up to extent necessary)
   b. Sison v. Ancheta
           i.    What did Justice Marshall say? And what did Justice Holmes say?
          ii.    The statements are seemingly contradictory - how do we reconcile them
                 and make them stand together?
                     1. (Marshall - exercise of police power using power of taxation as an
                         implement; Holmes - exercise of power of taxation not to be
                         exercised arbitrarily and should not be confiscatory)
   b. Principles of Taxation under Art. 6 Section 28 – rule of taxation shall be uniform
        and equitable. Congress shall evolve a progressive system of taxation.
           i.    (Uniformity, Equity, Progressive)
          ii.    Sison v. Ancheta
                     1. (Simplified System of Taxation argued to be unconstitutional -
                         compensation income v. income earners from exercise of business
                         or trade)
                     2. Did the SC agree that it violates uniformity or equality in taxation?
                     3. What does uniformity or equality mean?
                             1. (Persons or things belonging to the same class shall be
                                taxed at the same rate wherever they may be found)
                             2. (LGU may impose additional taxes and the imposition of
                                these taxes may differ depending on the need)
                     4. Equitability
                             1. Burden of taxation shall rest on those who have the
                                capacity to pay
                     5. Progressive
                     6. Regressive - how does this work? 
                             1. (Tax base inversely proportional to tax rate)
                             2. What is the basis of a regressive system of taxation?
                     7. Is regressive prohibited?
                             1. (Tolentino v. Sec. of Finance - VAT is by its nature is a
                                regressive - nonetheless not prohibited by the Constitution)
          ii.    One of the essential requisites of eminent domain is public use -
                 traditional concept of public use is abandoned in ED - any advantage now
                 is public purpose - how about for power of taxation? (Direct and exclusive
                 public purpose)
         iii.    Pascual v. Sec. of Public Works - (road inside subdivision - indirect public
                 advantage - valid use of public funds? - public use is different from public
                 purpose - public use is utilization - for purpose objective - must be direct
                 and exclusive)
                     1. (Explanation of PPP by sir)
                     2. (Owner of a private subdivision subsequently donated the parcel
                         of land on which the road will be constructed - can we say now
                         that the subsequent donation cured the defect? (No - when the law
                                                                                           2
                 was passed appropriating that fund - validity of the budget or
                 appropriation shall be determined at the time of the passage)
b. Does the Const. prohibit double taxation?
      i.  (No express prohibition in the constitution - the power to tax once is as
          ample as the power to tax twice)
     ii.  What is double taxation? Same taxing purpose, same subject, same taxing
          authority, same tax period, same tax jurisdiction.
    iii.  Punsalan Case
              1. (Different taxing authorities)
     ii.  When there is doubt - how do we construe the power of taxation? (hence
          different from power of eminent domain)
              1. Stricter requirement for the passage of bills granting tax
                 exemption (majority vote of all members of congress)
                      1. Supposing during session of senate - GAA - 13 Senators -
                         can they constitute quorum? Required vote? (½ + 1 of 13 of
                         the quorum) or 7
                      2. Supposing - what is being heard is a bill granting tax
                         exemption - 13 senators - can they vote on the bill? (yes -
                         par. 2 sec. 16 art. 6) how many votes are required? (13)
              2. Const. also grants tax exemptions
                      1. Par. 3 Sec. 28 Art. 6
                             1. Charitable Institution - is an entity - charitable
                                 institution itself is granted exemption and not only
                                 its properties? (no - properties only)
                             2. In order to be exempted - actually directly and
                                 exclusively used - Lladoc v. CIR - donation was made
                                 for the construction of a church - donee’s tax - did
                                 the SC extend? (A gift tax is an Excise tax and as such
                                 is not covered by the exemption - only RPT)
                             3. Province of Abra v. Hernando (not in case list - sir
                                 only explained - exemption of the property and not
                                 of the owner - if merely on the basis of title, not
                                 valid)
                             4. Abra Valley College v. Aquino - extends to incidental
                                 - should the entire building have been exempted?
                      2. Par. 3 Sec. 4 Art. 14
                             1. ABC is a proprietary school - over the campus there
                                 are facilities being rented by commercial entities
                                 such as jollibee - jollibee pays monthly rental fees of
                                 500k/mo. - 500k is being used for school facilities -
                                 is 500k subject to tax? (under the constitution, yes -
                                 not covered by the exemption) by applying the
                                 provisions of the constitution eve if the income is
                                 used directly for educational purposes
                             2. Supposing ABC is a Non-stock Non-Profit
                                 educational institution - still subject to tax for the
                                 500k for rental to commercial entities? No. directly
                                 exclusively used for educational purpose
                                                                                      3
                             3. If an entity is incorporated as a charitable institution
                                - but is engaged in commercial transaction - it loses
                                its character as a charitable institution? No –
                                primary purpose is charitable institution.
                             4. Lung Center of the Philippines Case
                                    1. Do you agree that LCP cannot be considered
                                        as a charitable institution because it engages
                                        in business? Business is incidental in
                                        discharging the primary purpose.
                                    2. (8 factors to be considered as charitable -
                                        statute, corporate purpose, constitution and
                                        by laws, method of admin, nature of work
                                        actually     performed,    services     actually
                                        rendered, indefiniteness of beneficiaries, use
                                        and occupation of property)
b. Bill of Rights
     i.    Sec. 1, Art. 3
               a. What are the 2 constitutional rights guaranteed? (Due Process and
                   Equal Protection of the Laws) No person shall be deprived of life,
                   liberty and property without due process nor shall any person be
                   denied the equal protection of the laws.
    ii.    Due Process
               a. We’ve learned that a constitution should be clear - Is the rule
                   followed when it comes to due process? (it was deliberately kept
                   vague) to be resilient and flexible to adapt to changing times.
               b. Did the courts give due process meaning? (Ynot v. IAC) NO because
                   it will create a legal straightjacket
               c. How did Frankfurter define due process? Embodiment of the
                   supportive idea of justice and fair play. Justice Fernando? 
               d. Origin of the constitutional guarantee of due process - originates in
                   England - magna carta - what part is considered as the start?
                   Clause 39 provides? No free man shall be…
                       i.   What is the similar concept - concept law of the land covers
                            only one (procedural due process)
                      ii.   How did he define the law of the land?
               e. Dartmouth College v. Woodward
    ii.    Substantive v. Procedural Due Process
               a. Difference between the 2?
               b. (Substantive - is the law valid)
    ii.    What happens when there is a violation of due process? What is the
           consequence?
               a. Substantive v. Procedural. In substantial – the law is invalid. In
                   procedural, the procedure is invalid but the law remains valid.
    ii.    Aniag v. COMELEC
               a. What violation of due process was committed? (procedural due
                   process - information without allowing petitioner to go PI
                   substantive right but it is procedural due process).
    ii.    Ynot v IAC
                                                                                      4
           a. What aspect of due process was violated there? (substantive due
              process). Not lawful means
           b. Outright confiscation, procedural or substantive? Both as the SC
              declared the law unconstitutional.
           c. In admin proceedings - minimum requirements due process?
              (prior notice and hearing). But what are the exemptions?
 ii.   Hearing
           a. Does it require trial type or adversarial proceeding? No.
              procedural due process only means that the parties are given an
              opportunity to be heard
 ii.   Philippine Phosphate
           a. Med Arbitration Proceeding - during the preliminary conference -
              both parties agree to submit issues based on pleadings - did the SC
              agree that there was a violation of due process in that case? No.
              Not all hearings need to be a trial type/adversarial
 ii.   One of the important functions of admin agencies is to provide rules - if in
       the exercise of rate fixing power - is it required to comply with minimum
       requirements of notice and hearing? (it depends if the administrative
       agency is exercising a quasi legislative or quasi judicial function)QJ –
       notice and hearing required. QL – notice and hearing not mandatory.
iii.   PhilComsat Case
           a. When is an order quasi judicial and when is it quasi legislative? QJ
              – applies to a particular class effective immediately – QL/QE –
              applies to all, effective prospectively
           b. (Order of the MTC was issued in quasi judicial function hence prior
              notice and hearing are required - basis to reduce rates is based on
              finding of fact - SC said - philcomsat should be given opportunity to
              refute the report)
 ii.   Supposing LTFRB - issued an order directed to all TNVs - and allows
       increase of rates - without prior notice and hearing starting Nov 1 2020 -
       allowed? Yes because performing QL function.
           a. Issued an order to grab - reimburse all clients from jan 2019 - jan
              2020 50 pesos per km because grab overcharged - and was issued
              without prior notice and hearing - valid? (no) because in this case
              LTFRB exercising QJ function.
 ii.   Requisites of judicial or criminal due process in Alonte v. Javellana? (4)
          a. Sec. 14 Art. 3
          b. First Requisite - Clothed with Judicial Power to hear and determine
             matter before it - jurisdiction over the subject matter - how do
             courts acquire jurisdiction? (Sec. 2 Art. 8 - only limitation congress
             cannot deprive SC jurisdiction - nonetheless - congress has power
             to define jurisdiction of SC)
          c. 2nd - over the person - how? Either by arrest or voluntary
             surrender
          d. 3rd (Alonte Case; sir explains - transfer of venue of hearing -
             presiding judge scheduled a hearing to determine voluntariness
             and due execution of voluntary desistance - accused were
             convicted - then claim violation on due process) is there a violation
                                                                                 5
                  of right to be heard? Yes. The waiver is only one issue is not a
                  blanket waiver of the all other issues in the criminal case – on the
                  guilt or innocence of the accused.
                     i.   (Waiver of right to be heard on right to be heard is not a
                          blanket on all other issues to be heard - waiver is only up to
                          voluntariness and due execution of desistance)
     ii.  Administrative Proceedings Requisites
              a. What are the cardinal primary rights? Ang Tibay case (7 primary
                  rights) 6. The judge acted independently based on evidence. 7. The
                  parties are notified of the basis of the decision.
     ii.  School Disciplinary Proceedings in Due Process
              a. Requirements?
              b. Ateneo de Manila v. Capulong Case - what happened in this case? 5
                  requirements. The SC did not other that the right to cross-examine
                  is a requirement because this is not an adversarial proceeding and
                  no criminal liability as a result.
     ii.  Relation of due process to void for vagueness rule? When is a law void for
          being vague? (lacks comprehensible standards - guess at meaning and
          differ as to its application - laws void for being vague are unconstitutional
          for 2 reasons - southern hemisphere case)
    iii.  Overbreadth doctrine - how is this applied?
    iv.   May both void for vagueness and overbreadth be used to assess validity of
          criminal laws? No, they are not appropriate, they are only applicable to
          religious freedom cases and free speech cases.
     v.   Supposing congress passed a law - in relation to a quarantine regulation -
          unlawful for any vulnerable person to go out of his home - penalty 1
          month imprisonment - can this be challenged? Void for being vague? Can
          question the constitutionality as applied doctrine but not through a facial
          challenge (questioning the constitutionality even if the law is not yet
          applied. 
    vi.   Facial Challenge (on its face even if not yet applied or a party has not yet
          incurred damage can already question the constitutionality of that law -
          can raise defenses available to 3rd parties - fundamental rights - not
          available in criminal cases - chilling effect)  v. As Applied Doctrine
b. Equal Protection
      i.  Is it the same here that there is no specific meaning? Yes there is a
          definition based on the ruling of the SC
     ii.  What is equal protection according to the SC?
    iii.  Only against the legislative department? The term law does not apply to
          legislative acts only
    iv.   People v. Vera (restraint on 3 grand departments of government and
          subordinates)
     v.   What are the two evils sought to be addressed – unjust discrimination
    vi.   PASEI v. Drilon - equal protection is covered by due process? (equal
          protection is intended to address specific violations)
              a. When to apply due process (arbitrariness) and when equal
                  protection (issue: unjust discrimination, undue favor)
                                                                                      6
  ii.   In application of equal protection - is there a difference between unjust
        discrimination and that which allows discrimination? (both violate
        guarantee)
            a. People v. Vera - is there anything discriminatory in Sec. 11 of the
                Probation Act? It does not violate equal protection of the law? 
  ii.   Invoked when law treats persons and things differently - what if the law
        applies equally to persons and things? To challenge the constitutionality
        of a law?
 iii.   Villegas Case
            a. Ordinance applied to all aliens?
            b. Laws should be universally applied to be valid? Are all aliens
                similarly situated?
  ii.   What is classification? (only reasonable ones are allowed)
 iii.   Analytical tests (not requisites) to determine reasonableness of
        classification (3 - strict - intermediate scrutiny test/heightened review
        test - rational relationship test)
 iv.    PASEI v. Drilon - what test should be relied on there?
  v.    (Application of these tests is by deduction)
 vi.    Garcia v. Drilon - husband who challenges constitutionality of VAWC -
        persons are classified according to gender - what test should be applied?
        (intermediate) 
 vii.   When is the rational relationship test applied? Applied basis?
viii.   Strict Scrutiny - what must be proven by the government to sustain
        legitimate classification? (compelling state interest - least intrusive
        means)
 ix.    Intermediate - what must be proven? (important governmental interest -
        relationship with object of the law and classification is genuine and not
        based on broad generalizations)
  x.    As applied to all 3 rules - 4 requisites?