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EFFECTIVITYOFLAWS (ART.

2)

1. Tañada v.Tuvera

G.R. No. L-63915; December 29, 1986 CRUZ, J.:

ALL STATUTES OF LOCAL APPLICATION AND PRIVATE LAWS SHALL BE PUBLISHED FOR THEIR
EFFECTIVITY

FACTS:

Petitioners seek a writ of mandamus to compel respondent public officials to publish and/or cause the publication of
various Presidential Decrees (PDs), letters of instructions, general orders, proclamations, executive orders, letters of
implementation and administrative orders, in the Official Gazette.

Petitioners invoked that a law, to be valid and enforceable, must be published in the Official Gazette or otherwise
effectively promulgated. The government argued that while publication was necessary as a rule, it was not so when it was
"otherwise provided," as when the decrees themselves declared that they were to become effective immediately upon their
approval.

The SC, in its decision in 1985, affirmed the necessity of the publication of the presidential issuances which are of general
application. Petitioners then moved for reconsideration/clarification asserting that the clause “unless it is otherwise
provided” meant that the publication required therein was not always imperative.

ISSUE:

Whether publication is an indispensable requirement for the effectivity of the presidential issuances in question

HELD:

YES. Publication of presidential issuances at bar is an indispensable requirement for their effectivity despite the special
provisions as to the date they are to take effect.

Art. 2 of the Civil Code provides that “laws shall take effect after fifteen days following the completion of their
publication in the Official Gazette, unless it is otherwise provided. This Code shall take effect one year after such
publication.” The phrase "unless it is otherwise provided" refers to the date of effectivity and not to the requirement of
publication itself, which cannot in any event be omitted. All statutes, including those of local application and private laws,
shall be published as a condition for their effectivity, which shall begin fifteen days after publication unless a different
effectivity date is fixed by the legislature.

In the case at bar, the SC held that all presidential decrees and executive orders promulgated by the President in the
exercise of legislative powers whenever the same are validly delegated by the legislature or, at present, directly conferred
by the Constitution, shall be published as a condition for their effectivity. On the other hand, interpretative regulations and
those merely internal in nature, that is, regulating only the personnel of the administrative agency and not the public, need
not be published.

Therefore, the Court declared that all laws aforementioned shall be published in full in the Official Gazette to become
effective in accordance with Article 2 of the Civil Code.

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