SC affirms HRET ruling on PH citizenship of Rep. Rosanna Vergara


The Supreme Court (SC) has affirmed the 2019 ruling by the House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal (HRET) which dismissed the case filed against Nueva Ecija’s 3rd District Rep. Rosanna “Ria” V. Vergara who was said to be an American citizen and thus not qualified to be a member of Congress.

Rep. Rosanna Vergara

Vergara won in the 2016 congressional election and was re-elected in 2019.

In a decision written by Associate Justice Alfredo Benjamin S. Caquioa, the SC dismissed the petition filed by Philip Hernandez Piccio and the intervention lodged by Aurelio Matias Umali against the HRET ruling.

The summary of the decision came from the SC’s public information office (PIO) which said that a copy will be posted in the website – sc.judiciary.gov.ph – once received from the Office of the Clerk of Court.

The SC said: “In sum, there is overwhelming competent evidence proving Vergara’s compliance with R.A. 9225 (Citizenship Retention and Acquisition Act of 2003 which states that ‘natural-born citizens of the Philippines who become citizens of another country shall be deemed not to have lost their Philippine citizenship’) for the re-acquisition of her Philippine citizenship.”

The evidence on record, the SC said, shows that Vergara duly re-acquired her Philippine Citizenship pursuant to RA 9225.

It pointed out that a natural-born Filipino citizen, who has lost his Filipino citizenship by reason of naturalization abroad, may qualify to run for elective public office in Philippines provided that he or she must re-acquire Philippine citizenship by taking an oath of allegiance to the Republic of the Philippines, and that he or she must make a personal and sworn renunciation of his foreign citizenship.

It said it agreed with HRET that Vergara had complied with the two requisites under RA 9225.

It pointed out that as correctly found by the HRET, Vergara had duly reacquired her Philippine citizenship by observing the requirements of the law, foremost of which is the taking of the Oath of Allegiance.

It stressed that Vergara’s presentation of the original copy of her IC (identification certificate) No. 06-12955, the existence and genuineness of which were not contested, is prima facie proof that she complied with the requirements of RA 9225 (and its implementing rules) to re-acquire her Philippine citizenship. One of such requirements is the submission of two original copies of her duly-executed Oath of Allegiance.

Based on the SC PIO’s summary, Vergara was born to Filipino parents on Nov. 5, 1963 in Manila and in 1994, she moved to Cabanatuan City where she married and later established a family home.

In 1998, she moved to the United States of America, obtained a Certificate of Naturalization as an American citizen, and was thereby issued an American passport.

In 2006, Vergara filed with the Philippine Bureau of Immigration (BI) a Petition for the Issuance of an Identification Certificate (IC) pursuant to RA 9225 for the retention/reacquisition of Philippine citizenship.

She also took her Oath of Allegiance to the Republic of the Philippines as part of the documentary requirements supporting her RA 9225 petition.

On Nov.30, 2006, she was issued IC No. 06-12955 having re-acquired her Philippine citizenship. She subsequently executed an Affidavit of Renunciation of Foreign Citizenship dated Sept. 4, 2015.

She then filed her certificate of candidacy for the House of Representatives in the 2016 elections in Nueva Ecija.  She won.