![]() ![]() Under the circumstances, whether this Court should consider this Petition for Review as a proper occasion to pass upon the constitutionality of Republic Act No. THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN DISMISSING THE PETITION ON THE THEORY THAT THE ISSUE OF CONSTITUTIONALITY WAS NOT RAISED AT THE FIRST OPPORTUNITY AND THAT, THE PETITION WAS A COLLATERAL ATTACK ON THE VALIDITY OF THE LAW. In this instant Petition for Review, the only issue directly in point that can be raised against the Court of Appeals Decision and Resolution is the first one cited as a ground for the appeal, which I quote: The Court of Appeals cannot therefore be faulted for any erroneous ruling on the aforesaid substantive constitutional issues. More accurately put, however, the Court of Appeals refrained from touching at all those four substantive issues of constitutionality. ![]() Nevertheless, four out of the five issues raised by the petitioner here dealt with the alleged unconstitutionality of Republic Act No. Hence, the Court of Appeals Decision and Resolution denied due course to the Petition for Prohibition "for being fraught with fatal technical infirmities" and for not being ripe for judicial review. 9262 can only be questioned in a direct action and it cannot be the subject of a collateral attack in a petition for prohibition, as the inferior court having jurisdiction on the action may itself determine the constitutionality of the statute, and the latter’s decision on the matter may be reviewed on appeal and not by a writ of prohibition, as it was held in People v. The constitutionality of Republic Act No. 9262, against her husband, petitioner Jesus C. The constitutional issue was raised for the first time on appeal before the Court of Appeals by petitioner and not at the earliest opportunity, which should be before the Regional Trial Court (RTC), Branch 41, Bacolod City, acting as a Family Court, where private respondent Rosalie Garcia, wife of petitioner, instituted a Petition for Temporary and Permanent Protection Order 1 under Republic Act No. 9262 and instead dismissed the Petition for Prohibition on technical grounds, as follows:ġ. Garcia under the law and (2) the Resolution dated August 14, 2007, denying petitioner's Motion for Reconsideration of the said Decision.Īt the outset, it should be stressed that the Court of Appeals, in its assailed Decision and Resolution, did not pass upon the issue of constitutionality of Republic Act No. 9262, otherwise known as the "Anti-Violence Against Women and Their Children Act of 2004," and sought a temporary restraining order and/or injunction to prevent the implementation of the Temporary Protection Order (TPO) and criminal prosecution of herein petitioner Jesus A. ![]() 01698 dismissing the Petition for Prohibition with Injunction and Temporary Restraining Order (Petition for Prohibition) which questioned the constitutionality of Republic Act No. This Petition for Review on Certiorari assails: (1) the Decision dated Januof the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. With due respect, however, I submit that the test to determine an equal protection challenge against the law, denying statutory remedies to men who are similarly situated as the women who are given differential treatment in the law, on the basis of sex or gender, should be at the level of intermediate scrutiny or middle-tier judicial scrutiny rather than the rational basis test used in the ponencia of Justice Bernabe. I concur with the conclusion reached in the ponencia ably written by the Honorable Estela Perlas-Bernabe. DRILON, Presiding Judge, Regional Trial Court-Branch 41, Bacolod City, and ROSALIE JAYPE-GARCIA, for herself and in behalf of minor children, namely: JO-ANN, JOSEPH EDUARD, JESSE ANTHONE, all surnamed GARCIA, Respondents. ♦ Concurring Opinion, Leonardo-De Castro ![]()
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