SC sets guidelines for establishing administrative warrants’ validity

MANILA, Philippines — To prevent administrative agencies or officers from legally performing oppressive acts, the Supreme Court (SC) established a set of conditions for administrative warrants to be considered valid and justified.

According to the SC on Friday, it recognizes the need to fix a set of guidelines regarding administrative warrants, which are writs directing or authorizing an administrative body to search for violations of administrative rules and regulations.

The following are the conditions laid by the court, which must be present and strictly complied with in validating and justifying administrative warrants:

The SC said that the establishment of the conditions above stemmed from the .

According to the SC, a Summary Deportation Order (SDO) was issued against Wenle in 2018 for being undocumented and undesirable. His and his companions’ passports were revoked by China for their supposed involvement in crimes within the country’s territory.

Wenle then filed a petition for habeas corpus, or protection against unlawful detention, claiming that their arrest was arbitrary and illegal. He argued that the SDO issued by the Bureau of Immigration (BI) was null and void as it was issued without notice and hearing, and not by a court of law.

Wenle’s petition was granted, the SC noted. The Regional Trial Court (RTC) in Manila ruled that his constitutional and statutory rights to due process were violated as “he was not afforded the chance to refute the charges against him in a hearing.”

However, the SC eventually nullified RTC’s ruling, after a certiorari—an order asking a higher court to review a lower court’s decision—was filed.

“Opting to resolve the issue of the constitutionality of administrative warrants in the instant case, the Court acknowledged that any doctrine It would hand out by choosing to resolve issues concerning administrative issuances such as administrative warrants without addressing the constitutional validity of such warrants themselves would amount to an ex post facto promulgation of doctrinal policies,” SC said in a press release.

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