Criminal Law 2 Set 1cases
Criminal Law 2 Set 1cases
EN BANC
[G.R. Nos. L-6025-26. July 18, 1956.]
THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, Plaintif-Appellee, vs. AMADO V.
HERNANDEZ, ET AL.,Defendants-Appellants.
RESOLUTION
CONCEPCION, J.:
This refers to the petition for bail filed by Defendant Appellant Amado
Hernandez on June 26, 1954, and renewed on December 22, 1955. A similar
petition, filed on December 28, 1953, had been denied by a resolution of
this court dated February 2, 1954. Although not stated in said resolution,
the
same
was
due
mainly
to
these
circumstances:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary The prosecution maintains that
Hernandez is charged with, and has been convicted of, rebellion complexed
with murders, arsons and robberies, for which the capital punishment, it is
claimed, may be imposed, although the lower court sentenced him merely
to life imprisonment. Upon the other hand, the defense contends, among
other things, that rebellion cannot be complexed with murder, arson, or
robbery. Inasmuch as the issue thus raised had not been previously settled
squarely, and this court was then unable, as yet, to reach a definite
conclusion thereon, it was deemed best not to disturb, for the time being,
the course of action taken by the lower court, which denied bail to the
movant. After mature deliberation, our considered opinion on said issue is
as follows:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
The first two paragraphs of the amended information in this case
read:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
The undersigned accuses (1) Amado V. Hernandez alias Victor alias
Soliman alias Amado alias AVH alias Victor Soliman, (2) Guillermo
Capadocia alias Huan Bantiling alias Cap alias G. Capadocia, (3) Mariano P.
Balgos alias Bakal alias Tony Collantes alias Bonifacio, (4) Alfredo Saulo
alias Elias alias Fred alias A.B.S. alias A.B., (5) Andres Baisa, Jr. alias Ben
alias Andy (6) Genaro de la Cruz alias Gonzalo alias Gorio alias Arong, (7)
Aquilino Bunsol alias Anong, (8) Adriano Samson alias Danoy, (9) Juan J.
Cruz alias Johnny 2, alias Jessie Wilson alias William, (10) Jacobo Espino,
(11) Amado Racanday, (12) Fermin Rodillas, and (13) Julian Lumanog alias
Manue, of the crime of rebellion with multiple murder, arsons and robberies
committed as follows:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
That on or about March 15, 1945, and for some time before the said date
and continuously thereafter until the present time, in the City of Manila,
Philippines, and the place which they had chosen as the nerve center of all
their rebellious activities in the different parts of the Philippines, the said
accused, conspiring, confederating, and cooperating with each other, as
well as with the thirty-one (31) Defendants charged in criminal cases Nos.
14071, 14082, 14270, 14315, and 14344 of the Court of First Instance of
Manila (decided May 11, 1951) and also with others whose whereabouts
and identities are still unknown, the said accused and their co-conspirators,
being then officers and/or members of, or otherwise associated with the
Congress of Labor Organizations (CLO) formerly known as the Committee
on Labor Organization (CLO), an active agency, organ, and instrumentality
Revised
Penal
Code
provides
When a single act constitutes two or more grave or less grave felonies, or
when an offense is a necessary means for committing the other, the
penalty for the most serious crime shall be imposed, the same to be
applied in its maximum period.
It is obvious, from the language of this article, that the same presupposes
the commission of two (2) or more crimes, and, hence, does not apply when
the culprit is guilty of only one crime.
Article 134 of said code reads:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
The crime of rebellion or insurrection is committed by rising publicly and
taking arms against the Government for the purpose of removing from the
In People vs. Labra, 81 Phil., 377, 46 Off. Gaz., Supp. No. 1, p. 159, we used
the following language:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
The accused in People vs. Delgado 83 Phil., 9, 46 Off. Gaz., 4213, had been
convicted by the Peoples Court of the crime of treason complexed with
the crime of murder and sentenced to the extreme penalty. In our
decision, penned by Mr. Justice Montemayor, we expressed ourselves as
follows:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
The lower court found Appellant guilty not only of treason, but of murder,
for the killing of Tomas Abella, and, following the provisions of Article 48 of
the Revised Penal Code sentenced him to death, the maximum penalty
provided by article 114.
The lower court erred in finding Appellant guilty of the murder of Tomas
Abella. The arrest and killing of Tomas Abella for being a guerilla, is alleged
in count 3 of the information, as one of the elements of the crime of treason
for which Appellant is prosecuted. Such element constitute a part of the
legal basis upon which Appellant stands convicted of the crime of treason.
The killing of Tomas Abella cannot be considered as legal ground for
convicting Appellant of any crime other than treason. The essential
elements of a given crime cannot be disintegrated in different parts, each
one stand as a separate ground to convict the accused of a different crime
or criminal offense. The elements constituting a given crime are integral
and inseparable parts of a whole. In the contemplation of the law, they
cannot be used for double or multiple purposes. They can only be used for
the sole purpose of showing the commission of the crime of which they
form part. The factual complexity of the crime of treason does not endow it
with the functional ability of worm multiplication or amoeba reproduction.
Otherwise, the accused will have to face as many prosecutions and
convictions as there are elements in the crime of treason, in open violation
of the constitutional prohibition against double jeopardy. (Italics supplied.)
The same conclusion was reached in People vs. Alibotod 82 Phil., 164, 46
Off. Gaz., 1005, despite the direct participation of the Defendant therein in
the maltreatment and killing of several persons.
In People vs. Vilo 82 Phil.,
held:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
524,
46
Off.
Gaz.,
2517,
we
The Peoples Court, however, erred in classifying the crime as treason with
murder. The killing of Amado Satorre and one Segundo is charged as an
element of treason, and it therefore becomes identified with the latter
crime, and cannot be the subject of a separate punishment or used in
combination with treason to increase the penalty as Article 48 of the
Revised Penal Code provides. (People vs. Prieto, L-399, 45 Off. Gaz. 3329.
See, also People vs. Labra, L-886, 46 Off. Gaz., [Supp. to No. 1], 159.)
(Italics supplied.)
To the same effect was our decision in People vs. Roble 83 Phil., 1, 46 Off.
Gaz., 4207. We stated therein:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
The court held that the facts alleged in the information is a complex crime
of treason with murders, with the result that the penalty provided for the
most serious offense was to be imposed on its maximum degree. Viewing
the case from the standpoint of modifying circumstances, the court
believed that the same result obtained. It opined that the killings were
murders qualified by treachery and aggravated by the circumstances of
evident premeditation, superior strength, cruelty, and an armed band.
We think this is error. The tortures and murders set forth in the information
are merged in and formed part of the treason. They were in this case the
The Appellant herein was and is a Filipino citizen. His adherence to the
Japanese forces of occupation and giving them aid and comfort by acting as
their spy, undercover man, investigator, and even killer when necessary to
cow and compel the inhabitants to surrender their firearms and disclose
information about the guerrillas has been fully established. His manner of
investigation and maltreatment of some of his victims like Tereso Sanchez
and Patricio Suico, was so cruel, brutal and inhuman that it is almost
unbelievable that a Filipino can commit and practice such atrocities
especially on his own countrymen. But, evidently, war, confusion and
opportunism can and do produce characters and monster unknown during
peace and normal times.
The Peoples Court found the Appellant guilty of treason complexed with
murder. The Solicitor General, however, maintains that the offense
committed is simple treason, citing the doctrine laid down by this court in
the case of People vs. Prieto, (L-399, 45 Off. Gaz., 3329) but accompanied
by the aggravating circumstance under Article 14, paragraph 21, of the
Revised Penal Code, and not compensated by any mitigating circumstance,
and he recommends the imposition of the penalty of death. We agree with
the Solicitor General that on the basis of the ruling of this court in the case
of People vs. Prieto, supra, the Appellant may be convicted only a treason,
and that the killing and infliction of physical injuries committed by him may
not be separated from the crime of treason but should be regarded as acts
performed in the commission of treason, although, as stated in said case,
the brutality with which the killing or physical injuries were carried out may
be taken as an aggravating circumstance. (Italics supplied.)
and reduced the penalty from death to life imprisonment and a fine of
P20,000.
Identical were the pertinent features of the case of People vs. Adlawan, 83
Phil., 194, 46 Off. Gaz., 4299, in which, through Mr. Justice Reyes (A), we
declared:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
cralaw we find merit in the contention that Appellant should have not
been convicted of the so called Complex crime of treason with murder,
robbery, and rape. The killings, robbery, and raping mentioned in the
information are therein alleged not as specific offenses but as mere
elements of the crime of treason for which the accused is being prosecuted.
Being merged in and identified with the general charged they cannot be
used in combination with the treason to increase the penalty under Article
48 of the Revised Penal Code. (People vs. Prieto, L-399, January 29, 1948,
45 Off. Gaz., 3329.) Appellant should, therefore, be held guilty of treason
only. (Italics supplied.)
In People vs. Suralta, 85 Phil., 714, 47 Off. Gaz., 4595, the language used
was:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
cralaw But the Peoples Court erred in finding the Appellant guilty of the
complex crime of treason with murder, because murder was an ingredient
continuous offense and one who commits it is not criminally liable for as
many crimes as there are overt acts, because all overt act he has done or
might have done for that purpose constitute but a single offense. (Guinto
vs. Veluz, 44. Off. Gaz., 909; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryPeople vs. Pacheco,
L-4750, promulgated July 31, 1953.) In other words, since the offense
charged in the amended information in the Court of First Instance of
Zamboanga is treason, the fact that the said information contains an
enumeration of additional ovart acts not specifically mentioned in the
indictment before the military court is immaterial since the new alleged
overt acts do not in themselves constitute a new and distinct offense from
that of treason, and this court has repeatedly held that a person cannot be
found guilty of treason and at the same time also guilty of overt acts
specified in the information for treason even if those overt acts, considered
separately, are punishable by law, for the simple reason that those overt
acts are not separate offenses distinct from that of treason but constitute
ingredients thereof. (Italics supplied.)
Thus, insofar as treason is concerned, the opinion of
question whether said crime may be complexed with
former was committed through the latter, and it is
information, had positively and clearly crystalized itself
early as January 29, 1948.
We have not overlooked the decision in People vs. Labra (L-1240, decided
on
May
12,
1949),
the
dispositive
part
of
which
partly
reads:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
Wherefore, the verdict of guilty must be affirmed. Articles 48, 114 and 248
of the Revised Penal Code are applicable to the offense of treason with
murder. However for lack of sufficient votes to impose the extreme penalty,
the Appellant will be sentenced to life imprisonment cralaw ..
Although it mentions Articles 48 and 248 of the Revised Penal Code and
the offense of treason with murder, it should be noted that we affirmed
therein the action of the Peoples Court, which, according to the opening
statement of our decision, convicted Labra of treason aggravated with
murder. Besides, the applicability of said articles was not discussed in said
decision. It is obvious, from a mere perusal thereof, that this court had no
intention of passing upon such question. Otherwise, it would have
explained why it did not follow the rule laid down in the previous cases of
Prieto, Labra (August 10, 1948), Alibotod, Vilo, Roble, Delgado and Adlawan
(supra), in which the issue was explicitly examined and decided in the
negative. Our continued adherence to this view in the subsequent cases of
Suralta, Navea, Pacheco and Crisologo, without even a passing reference to
the second Labra case, shows that we did not consider the same as
reflecting the opinion of the court on said question. At any rate, insofar as it
suggests otherwise, the position taken in the second Labra case must be
deemed reversed by our decisions in said cases of Suralta, Navea, Pacheco
and Crisologo.
It is true that treason and rebellion are distinct and different from each
other. This does not detract, however, from the rule that the ingredients of
a crime form part and parcel thereof, and, hence, are absorbed by the
same and cannot be punished either separately therefrom or by the
application of Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code. Besides there is more
reason to apply said rule in the crime of rebellion than in that of treason, for
the law punishing rebellion (Article 135, Revised Penal Code) specifically
mentions the act of engaging in war and committing serious violence
among its essential elements thus clearly indicating that everything
Thus, the Spanish Penal Code did not specifically declare that rebellion
includes the act of engaging in war against the forces of the Government
and of using serious violence for the purposes stated in Article 134 of the
Revised Penal Code. In view of this express statutory inclusion of the acts of
war and serious violence among the ingredients of rebellion in the
Philippines, it is clear that the distinction made by Cuello Calon between
grave and less grave offenses committed in the course of an insurrection
cannot be accepted in this jurisdiction. Again, if both classes of offenses are
part and parcel of a rebellion, or means necessary therefor, neither law nor
logic justifies the exclusion of the one and the inclusion of the other. In fact,
Cuello Calon admits that the difficulty lies in separating the accidents of
rebellion or sedition from the offenses independent therefrom. Ergo,
offenses that are not independent therefrom, but constituting an integral
part thereof committed, precisely, to carry out the uprising to its successful
conclusion are beyond the purview of Article 244. Indeed, the above
quoted statement of Cuello Calon to the effect that grave felonies
committed in the course of an insurrection are independent therefrom
was based upon a decision of the Supreme Court of Spain of February 5,
1872, which we find reported in the Codigo Penal de Filipinas, by Jose Perez
Rubio, as follows:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
Cuando no puedan descubrirse sus autores seran penados como tales los
jefes principales de la rebelion o sedicion.
and to the following observations of Cuello Calon (Derecho Penal, Vol. II, p.
110), in relation thereto:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
Se establece aqui que el en una rebelion o sedicion, o con motivo de ellas,
comete otros delitos (v.g., roba, mata o lesiona), sera responsable de estos
ademas de los delitos de rebelion o sedicion. La dificultad consiste en estos
casos en separar los accidentes de la rebelion o sedicion de los delitos
independientes de estas, y como las leyes no contienen en este punto
precepto alguno aplicable, su solucion ha quedado encomendada a los
tribunales. La jurisprudencia que estos han sentado considera como
accidentes de la rebelion o sedicion cuya criminalidad queda embedida
en la de estos delitos, y, por tanto, no son punibles especialmente los
hechos de escasa gravedad (v.g., atentados, desacatos, lesiones menos
graves); chan roblesvirtualawlibrarypor el contrario, las infracciones graves,
como el asesinato o las lesiones graves, se consideran como delitos
independientes de la rebelion o de la sedicion.
It should be noted, however, that said Article 244 of the old Penal Code of
the Philippines has not been included in our Revised Penal Code. If the
applicability of Article 48 to rebellion was determined by the existence of
said Article 244, then the elimination of the latter would be indicative of the
contrary.
Besides, the crime of rebellion, referred to by Cuello Calon, was that
punished in the Spanish Penal Code, Article 243 of which
provides:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
demuestran las salvajes voces de muerte proferidas por los asesinos contra
la persona del Gobernador; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarysin que al ejecutar
en el mismo recinto del templo los horrorosos hechos que aparecen en la
causa, alzasen bandera politica alguna ni dieran otro grito que el, en aquel
momento sacrilego e impio, de Viva la religion:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
Que la apreciar la Sala sentenciadora los hechos referentes al Gobernador
Civil de delito de asesinato, penarlo con arreglo al Codigo y declarar
inaplicable el citado Decreto de Amnistia, no ha cometido el error de
derecho sealado en los casos 1. 3. del articulo 4. de la ley sobre
establecimiento de la casacion criminal, ni infringido los articulos 250 y 259
del Codigo Penal de 1870. (Page 239; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryItalics
supplied.) (See, also, El Codigo Penal, by Hidalgo Garcia, Vol. I, p. 623.)
It is apparent that said case is not in point. There was no issue therein on
whether murder may be complexed with rebellion or sedition. The question
for determination was whether the killers of the victim were guilty of the
common crime of murder, or should have been convicted only of rebellion
or sedition. The court adopted the first alternative, not because of the
gravity of the acts performed by the accused, but because they had no
political
motivation.
Moreover,
theEndnote:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary to said quotation from Cuello
Calon reads:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
Los atentados desacatos y lesiones a la autoridad u otros delitos contra el
orden publico cometidos en la sedicion o con motivo de ella, no son delitos
distintos de la sedicion, 3 octubre 1903, 19 noviembre 1906; chan
roblesvirtualawlibraryla resistencia o acometimiento a la fuerza publica por
los sediciosos es accidente de la rebelion, 23 mayo 1890.
El asesinato de un gobernador cometido en el curso de un tumulto debe
penarse como un delito comun de asesinato, 5 febrero 1872. Sin embargo,
la jurisprudencia, tratandose de ciertos delitos, es vacilante; chan
roblesvirtualawlibraryasi, v. g., el acometimiento al teniente de alcalde se
ha declarado en un fallo independiente de la perturbacion tumultuaria
promovida para impedir al alcalde el cumplimiento de sus providencias, 16
marzo 1885, mientras que un hecho analogo se ha considerado en otra
sentenda ya citada como accidente de la rebelion, 3 Octubre 1903. El
acometimiento de los sediciosos a la fuerza publica es accidente de la
sedicion y no uno de los delitos particulares a que se refiere este articulo,
23 de mayo 1890. Entre estos delitos a que alude el precepto se hallan las
lesiones que puedan causar los sediciosos, 19 noviembre 1906.
(Endnote:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary 21, II Cuelo Calon, Derecho
Penal, pp. 110-111.) (Italics supplied.)
Thus in a decision, dated May 2, 1934, the Supreme Court of Spain
held:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
Considerando que la nota deferencial entre los delitos de rebelion y
sedicion, de una parte, y el de atentado, esta constituida por la
circunstancia de alzamiento publico que caracteriza a los primeros, los
cuales, por su indole generica, absorben a los de atentado y demas
infracciones que durante su comision y con su motivo se cometan, y
afirmandose como hecho en la sentencia recurrida que el procesado
Mariano Esteban Martinez realizo, en union de otros, el atendado que se le
imputa sin alzarse publicamente, cae por su base el recurso fundado en
supuesto distinto. (Jurisprudencia Criminal, Tomo 130, p. 551.) (Italics
supplied.)
To the same effect are, likewise, the following:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
In short, political crimes are those directly aimed against the political order,
as well as such common crimes as may be committed to achieve a political
purpose. The decisive factor is the intent or motive. If a crime usually
regarded as common like homicide, is perpetrated for the purpose of
removing from the allegiance to the Government the territory of the
Philippines Islands or any part thereof, then said offense becomes stripped
of its common complexion, inasmuch as, being part and parcel of the
crime of rebellion, the former acquires the political character of the latter.
Conformably with the foregoing, the case of murder against
the Defendant in U. S. vs. Lardizabal (1 Phil., 729) an insurgent who
killed a prisoner of war because he was too weak to march with the
retreating rebel forces, and could not be left behind without endangering
the safety of the latter was dismissed upon the ground that the
execution of said prisoner of war formed part of, and was included in, the
crime of sedition, which, in turn, was covered by an amnesty, to the
benefits of which said Defendant was entitled.
True, in U. S. vs. Alfont (1 Phil., 115), the commander of an unorganized
group of insurgents was, pursuant to Article 244 of our old Penal Code,
convicted of homicide for having shot and killed a woman who was driving
a vehicle. But the complex crime of rebellion with homicide was not
considered in that case. Apart from this, the accused failed to established
the relation between her death and the insurrection. What is more, it was
neither proved nor alleged that he had been prompted by political reasons.
In other words, his offense was independent from the rebellion. The latter
was merely the occasion for the commission of the former.
It is noteworthy that the aforementioned decisions of this court and the
Supreme Court of Spain in cases of treason, rebellion and sedition, are in
line with the trend in other countries, as well as in the field of international
relations. Referring to the question as to what offenses are political in
nature,
it
was
said
in
In
re
Ezeta
(62
Fed.
Rep.,
972):chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
What constitutes an offense of a political character has not yet been
determined by judicial authority. Sir James Stephens, in his work, History of
the Criminal Law of England (Volume 2, p. 71), thinks that it should be
interpreted to mean that fugitive criminals are not to be surrendered for
extradition crimes if those crimes were incidental to and formed a part of
political disturbances. Mr. John Stuart Mill, in the house of commons, in
1866, while discussing an amendment to the act of extradition, on which
the treaty between England and France was founded, gave this
definition:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary Any offense committed in the course
of or furthering of civil war, insurrection, or political commotion. Hansards
Debates Vol. 184, p. 2115. In the Castioni Case, supra, decided in 1891, the
question was discussed by the most eminent counsel at the English bar,
and considered by distinguished judges, without a definition being framed
that would draw a fixed and certain line between a municipal or common
crime and one of political character. I do not think, said Denman, J., it is
necessary or desirable that we should attempt to put into language, in the
shape of an exhaustive definition, exactly the whole state of things, or
every state of things, which might bring a particular case within the
description of an offense of a political character. In that case, Castioni was
charged with the murder of one Rossi, by shooting him with a revolver, in
the town of Bellinzona, in the canton of Ticino, in Switzerland. The
deceased, Rossi, was a member of the state council of the canton of Ticino.
Castioni was a citizen of the same canton. For some time previous to the
murder, much dissatisfaction had been felt and expressed by a large
follows that the crimes charged here, associated as they are with the actual
conflict of armed forces, are of a political character.
The draft of a treaty on International Penal Law, adopted by the congress
of Montevideo in 1888, and recommended by the International American
Conference to the governments of the Latin-American nations in 1890,
contains the following provisions (Article 23):chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
Political offenses, offenses subversive of the internal and external safety of
a state or common offenses connected with these, shall not warrant
extradition. The determination of the character of the offense is incumbent
upon the nations upon which the demand for extradition is made; chan
roblesvirtualawlibraryand its decision shall be made under and according to
the provisions of the law which shall prove to be most favorable to the
accused:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
I am not aware that any part of this Code has been made the basis of
treaty stipulations between any of the American nations, but the article
cited may be at least accepted as expressing the wisdom of leading jurists
and diplomats. The article is important with respect to two of its
features:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary (1) provides that a fugitive shall not be
extradited for an offense connected with a political offense, or with an
offense subversive of the internal or external safety of the state; chan
roblesvirtualawlibraryand (2) the decision as to the character of the offense
shall be made under and according to the provisions of the law which shall
prove most favorable to the accused. The first provision is sanctioned by
Calvo, who, speaking of the exemption from extradition of persons charged
with political offenses, says:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
The exemption even extends to acts connected with political crimes or
offenses, and it is enough, as says Mr. Fuastin Helio; chan
roblesvirtualawlibrarythat a common crime be connected with a political
act, that it be the outcome of or be in the outcome of or be in the execution
of such, to be covered by the privilege which protects the latter Calvo,
Droit Int. (3me ed.) p. 413, section 1262.
The second provision of the article is founded on the broad principles of
humanity found everywhere in the criminal law, distinguishing its
administration with respect to even the worst features of our civilization
from the cruelties of barbarism. When this article was under discussion in
the international American conference in Washington, Mr. Silva, of
Colombia, submitted some observations upon the difficulty of drawing a
line between an offense of a political character and a common crime, and
incidentally referred to the crime of robbery, in terms worthy of some
consideration here. He said:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
In the revolutions, as we conduct them in our countries, the common
offenses are necessarily mixed up with the political in many cases. A
colleague General Caamao (of Ecuador) knows how we carry on wars. A
revolutionist needs horses for moving, beef to feed his troops, etc.; chan
roblesvirtualawlibraryand since he does not go into the public markets to
purchase these horses and that beef, nor the arms and saddles to mount
and equip his forces, he takes them from the first pasture or shop he find at
hand. This is called robbery everywhere, and is a common offense in time
of peace, but in time of war it is a circumstance closely allied to the manner
of waging it. International American Conference, Vol. 2, p. 615. (Italics
supplied.)
another, who suffers thereby several injuries, one of which produced his
death, may he, after conviction for murder or homicide, based upon said
fatal injury, be accused or convicted, in a separate case, for the non-fatal
injuries sustained by the victim? Or may the former be convicted of the
complex crime of murder or homicide with serious and/or less serious
physical injuries? The mere formulation of these questions suffices to show
that the limitation of the rule on double jeopardy to a subsequent
prosecution for the same offense does not constitute a license for the
separate prosecution of two offenses resulting from the same act, if one
offense is an essential element of the other. At any rate, as regards this
phase of the issue, which was not touched in the Cabrera cases, the rule
therein laid down must necessarily be considered modified by our decision
in the cases of People vs. Labra (46 Off. Gaz., Supp. No. 1, p. 159) and
Crisologo vs. People and Villalobos (supra), insofar as inconsistent
therewith.
The accuracy of this conclusion is borne out by the fact that, since 1850,
when the counterpart of our Article 48 was inserted in the Penal Code of
Spain, or for over a century, it does not appear to have been applied by the
Supreme Court thereof to crimes of murder committed in furtherance of an
insurrection.
The Court is conscious of the keen interest displayed, and the considerable
efforts exerted, by the Executive Department in the apprehension and
prosecution of those believed to be guilty of crimes against public order, of
the lives lost, and the time and money spent in connection therewith, as
well as of the possible implications or repercussions in the security of the
State. The careful consideration given to said policy of a coordinate and coequal branch of the Government is reflected in the time consumed, the
extensive and intensive research work undertaken, and the many meetings
held by the members of the court for the purpose of elucidating on the
question under discussion and of settling the same.
The role of the judicial department under the Constitution is, however,
clear to settle justiceable controversies by the application of the law. And
the latter must be enforced as it is with all its flaws and defects, not
affecting its validity not as the judges would have it. In other words, the
courts must apply the policy of the State as set forth in its laws, regardless
of the wisdom thereof.
It is evident to us that the policy of our statutes on rebellion is to consider
all acts committed in furtherance thereof as specified in Articles 134 and
135 of the Revised:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary Penal Code as constituting
only one crime, punishable with one single penalty namely, that
prescribed in said Article 135. It is interesting to note, in this connection,
that the penalties provided in our old Penal Code (Articles 230 to 232) were
much stiffer, namely:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
1. Life imprisonment to death for the promoters, maintainers and
leaders of the rebellion, and, also, for subordinate officers who held
positions of authority, either civil or ecclesiastical, if the purpose of the
movement was to proclaim the independence of any portion of the
Philippine territory;
2. Reclusion temporal in its maximum period for said promoters,
maintainers and leaders of the insurrection, and for its subordinate officers,
if the purpose of the rebellion was any of those enumerated in Article 229,
except that mentioned in the preceding paragraph;
3. Reclusion temporal:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary (a) for subordinate
officers
other
than
those
already
adverted
to; chan
roblesvirtualawlibraryand (b) for mere participants in the rebellion falling
under
the
first
paragraph
of
No.
2
of
Article
174; chan
roblesvirtualawlibraryand
4. Prision mayor in its medium period to reclusion temporal in its minimum
period for participants not falling under No. 3.
After the cession of the Philippines to the United States, the rigors of the
old Penal Code were tempered. Its aforementioned provisions were
superseded by section 3 of Act No. 292, which reduced the penalty to
imprisonment for not more than ten (10) years and a fine not exceeding
$10,000, or P20,000, for every person who incites, sets on foot, assists or
engages in any rebellion or insurrection cralaw or who gives aid and
comfort to any one so engaging in such rebellion or insurrection. Such
liberal attitude was adhered to by the authors of the Revised Penal Code.
The penalties therein are substantially identical to those prescribed in Act
292. Although the Revised Penal Code increased slightly the penalty of
imprisonment for the promoters, maintainers and leaders of the uprising, as
well as for public officers joining the same, to a maximum not exceeding
twelve (12) years of prision mayor, it reduced the penalty of imprisonment
for mere participants to not more than eight (8) years of prision mayor, and
eliminated the fine.
This benign mood of the Revised Penal Code becomes more significant
when we bear in mind it was approved on December 8, 1930 and became
effective on January 1, 1932. At that time the communists in the Philippines
had already given ample proof of their widespread activities and of their
designs and potentialities. Prior thereto, they had been under surveillance
by the agents of the law, who gathered evidence of their subversive
movements, culminating in the prosecution of Evangelista, Manahan (57
Phil., 354; chan roblesvirtualawlibrary57 Phil., 372), Capadocia (57 Phil.,
364), Feleo (57 Phil., 451), Nabong (57 Phil., 455), and others. In fact, the
first information against the first two alleged that they committed the crime
of inciting to sedition on and during the month of November, 1930, and for
sometime prior and subsequent thereto.
As if this were not enough, the very Constitution adopted in 1935,
incorporated a formal and solemn declaration (Article II, section 5)
committing the Commonwealth, and, then the Republic of the Philippines,
to the promotion of social justice. Soon later, Commonwealth Act No. 103,
creating the Court of Industrial Relations, was passed. Then followed a
number of other statutes implementing said constitutional mandate. It is
with the letter and spirit of the fundamental law, we said in the
aforementioned case of Montano vs. Ocampo:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
Such evils as may result from the failure of the policy of the law punishing
the offense to dovetail with the policy of the law enforcing agencies in the
apprehension and prosecution of the offenders are matters which may be
brought to the attention of the departments concerned. The judicial branch
cannot amend the former in order to suit the latter. The Court cannot
indulge in judicial legislation without violating the principle of separation of
powers, and, hence, undermining the foundation of our republican system.
In, short, we cannot accept the theory of the prosecution without causing
much bigger harm than that which would allegedly result from the adoption
of the opposite view.
xxx
xxx
Separate Opinions
PADILLA, J., dissenting:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
Amado V. Hernandez and others were charged in the Court of First Instance
of Manila with the crime of rebellion with multiple murder, arsons and
robberies. The body of the information charged that he and his coDefendants conspired and that as a necessary means to commit the crime
of rebellion, in connection therewith and in furtherance thereof, have
then and there committed acts of murder, pillage, looting, plunder, arson,
and planned destruction of private and public property to create and spread
chaos, disorder, terror, and fear so as to facilitate the accomplishment of
the aforesaid purpose, and recited the different crimes committed by
convicting the Defendant of the crime charged, the judgment and sentence
of the trial court in such criminal case must be taken at its face value and
be given full faith and credit by this Court.
Upon the ground that there is no complex crime of rebellion with murder,
the penalty provided for to be imposed upon persons found guilty of
rebellion being prision mayor and a fine not to exceed P20,000 only, 1 the
majority grants the petition for bail filed by the Appellant.
Without a review of the evidence presented in the case, the majority has
taken up and discussed the question whether, under and pursuant to the
provisions of article 135 of the Revised Penal Code, the complex crime of
rebellion with murder may arise or exist or be committed and has reached
the conclusion that murder as an incident to rebellion, is integrated,
imbibed, incorporated, or absorbed in, or part and parcel of, the last
mentioned crime. For that reason it is of the opinion that, as the
information filed against Amado V. Hernandez does not charge a capital
offense, he may be admitted to bail at the discretion of the Court.
Section
1,
paragraph
16,
Article
provides:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
III,
of
the
Constitution
Even if the majority opinion that the crime charged in the information is
rebellion only a non-capital offense be correct, still the granting of bail
after conviction is discretionary, and I see no plausible reason for the
reversal of this Courts previous stand, because the security of the State is
at stake.
For these reasons I dissent.
xxx
xxx
xxx
Asi, hay que reconocer que es plausible que, cuando un delito es medio de
realizar otro, se imponga al culpable la pena correspondiente al mayor en
su grado maximo; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarypero que no los es si resulta
que ha sido medio necesario. Por lo contrario, para que sea justo el
aumento de pena, con arreglo a la doctrina general acerca del delito y las
circunstancia agravantes, es preciso que existan y no se aprovechen otros
procedimientos, otros recursos, mas o menos faciles para consumar el
delito. Entonces la responsibilidad se hace mayor eligiendo un medio que
sea un delito en si. El que puede, haciendo uso de su libertad y de su
inteligencia, escoger entre varios procedimientos para llegar a un fin, y se
decide por uno que por si solo constituye delito, de este delito no
necessario para la realizacion del proyectado como fin, debe responder
tambien.
xxx
xxx
xxx
xxx
xxx
robbery, arson, kidnapping, etc., as long as the latter are committed in the
course and in furtherance of the former. The idea of one crime absorbing a
more serious one with a more severe penalty does not readily appeal to the
reasonable and logical mind which can only comprehend a thing absorbing
another smaller or less than itself in volume, in importance, in value or in
category. That is why Judge Montesa in the three cases, People vs.
Hernandez, People vs. Espiritu, and People vs. Medina, criminal cases Nos.
15481, 15479 and 1411 respectively, of the Court of First Instance, Manila,
in his decision convicting the accused therein, in disposing of the theory of
absorption, urged upon him by counsel for the defense to the effect that
the crime of rebellion absorbs the crime of murder, robbery, arson, etc.,
made the following observations:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
The theory of absorption tenaciously adhered to by the defense to the
effect that rebellion absorbs all these more serious offenses is preposterous
to say the least, considering that it is both physically and metaphysically
imposible for a smaller unit or entity to absorb a bigger one. (Montesa, J.,
People vs. Hernandez G.R. No. 15481, P. 78.)
We need not go into an academic discussion of this question because as a
matter of law, my opinion, criminal jurisprudence, expounding the criminal
law namely the Penal Code and the Penal Code of Spain, on which it is
based, expressly and clearly declare that the common crimes of murder,
robbery, arson, etc., committed in the course or by reason of rebellion, are
separate crimes, not to be merged in or absorbed by rebellion and should
be prosecuted separately. Article 259 of the Penal Code of Spain, of 1870
on which our Penal Code promulgated in 1887, was based, provides as
follow:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
Then in the treason case of People vs. Barrameda, 85 Phil., 789, 47 Off.
Gaz., 5082, on the strength of our decision in the case of Labra, the
Solicitor General recommended that Barrameda be also convicted of the
complex crime of treason with multiple murder and sentenced to death.
This Tribunal accepted the Solicitor Generals recommendation and
imposed
the
death
penalty
in
the
following
language:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
We entertain not the least doubt as to the guilt of the Appellant. His very
counsel de oficio who made an analysis of the testimonies of the witnesses
for the prosecution and painstakingly stated them in detail in his brief,
agrees that his client is guilty although he prays that the sentence of life
imprisonment be affirmed. The Solicitor General, however, recommends
that the penalty of death be imposed upon the Appellant. Considering that
the treason committed by the Appellantwas accompanied not only by the
apprehension of Americans (U. S. citizens) and their delivery to the
Japanese forces which evidently later executed them, but also by killing
with his own hands not only one but several Filipinos, his own countrymen,
and that in addition to this, he took part in the mass killing and slaughter of
many other Filipinos, we are constrained to agree to said recommendation.
However, unpleasant, even painful is the compliance with our duty, we
hereby impose upon the Appellant Teodoro Barrameda the penalty of death
which will be carried out on a day to be fixed by the trial court within thirty
(30) days after the return of the record of the case to said court.
With the two aforecited cases, it may not be said that the Supreme Court
has always held that there can be no complex crime of treason with
murder.
The theory of the majority is that the crime of rebellion with the maximum
penalty of twelve years and fine, absorbs the other crimes of murder,
Cuando no puedan descubrirse sus autores, seran penados como tales los
jefes principales de la rebelion o sedicion. (Groiazrd, El Codigo Penal de
1870, Tomo III, Articulo 259, p. 649.)
committing other more serious crime such as murder, robbery, arson, etc.,
with impunity. The above much commented Article 259 of the Spanish
Penal Code has its counterpart in Article 244 of our old Penal Code in
practically the same wording and phraseology:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
It is merely stating the obvious to say that sedition is not the same offense
as
murder.
Sedition
is
a
crime
against
public
order; chan
roblesvirtualawlibrarymurder is a crime against persons. Sedition is a crime
directed against the existence of the State, the authority of the
government,
and
the
general
public
tranquility; chan
roblesvirtualawlibrarymurder is a crime directed against the lives of
individuals. (U. S. vs. Abad (1902) 1 Phil. 437.) Sedition in its more general
sense is the raising of commotions or disturbances in the state; chan
roblesvirtualawlibrarymurder at common law is where a person of sound
mind and discretion unlawfully kills any human being, in the peace of the
sovereign, with malice aforethought, express or implied.
The offenses charged in the two informations for sedition and murder are
perfectly distinct in point of law, however, nearly they may be connected in
point of fact. Not alone are the offenses eo nomine different, but the
allegations in the body of the informations are different. The gist of the
information for sedition is the public and tumultuous uprising of the
constabulary in order to attain by force and outside of legal methods the
object of indicting an act of hate and revenge upon the persons of the
police force of the city of Manila by firing at them in several places in the
city of Manila; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarythe gist of the information in the
murder case is that the constabulary, conspiring together, illegally and
criminally killed eight persons and gravely wounded three others. The
crimes of murder and serious physical injuries were not necessarily
included in the information for sedition; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryand
the Defendants could not have been convicted of these crimes under the
first information. (Phil. Vol. 43, pages 99-100.)
There is an insinuation made in the majority resolution, that the American
Law on sedition and rebellion, the origin of our present law on the subject,
is more benign and liberal than its counterpart in the Spanish Penal Code,
defining and penalizing sedition and rebellion, and that under American
People
vs.
Capadocia; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryNo. 10400 People vs. Salvador No.
2704 People vs. Nava; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryNo. 19166 People
vs. Pomeroy and the same case 19166 People vs. Taruc, only one judge,
Hon. Gregorio Narvasa, of the Court of First Instance of Manila, held that
there is no complex crime of rebellion with murder, and his holding was
based mainly if not entirely on the decisions of this Tribunal in the treason
cases which as I have already explained, are not controlling or applicable.
In the other cases, five judges of Courts of First Instance, Judges Ocampo,
Castelo, Barcelona, Gatmaitan, and Montesa, held that there is such a
complex crime of rebellion with murder and actually convicted the accused
of said complex crime. Again, in the case of People vs. Umali, et al.,
criminal case No. 11037 of the Court of First Instance of Quezon Province,
Judge Gustavo Victoriano, convicted the accused of the complex crime of
rebellion with multiple murder, etc. Recently, in several criminal cases
pending in Pangasinan, involving the complex crimes of rebellion with
multiple murder, etc., Judge Morfe of the Court of First Instance of that
province acting upon motions to quash the informations on the ground that
there was no such complex crime of rebellion with murder and
consequently, the informations were not in accordance with law, for
charging more than one offense, in a well reasoned and considered order,
denied the same and held that there is a complex crime of rebellion with
murder. Of course, these opinions of judges of the lower courts are not
binding on this tribunal but surely, they are persuasive and cannot be
ignored. At least, they show that there are others, learned in the law, who
subscribe to the theory of complex crime of rebellion with murder, arson,
etc.
Our decision in the case of People vs. Umali, (96 Phil., 185), promulgated on
November 29, 1954, is another proof that murders committed in the course
of sedition or rebellion are not absorbed by the latter. In said case, this
court in a unanimous decision found the Defendants therein guilty of
sedition, multiple murder, arson, frustrated murder and physical injuries
and sentenced them accordingly. The question may again be asked, if there
is such a complex crime of sedition with murder, arson, etc., why were
Umali and his co-accused not convicted of this complex crime? The answer
decision
in
that
case
which
we
rape was imposed although it exceeded in duration and severity the total of
the penalty for rape and that for the relatively light penalty for physical
injuries. In the case of People vs. Parulan (88 Phil., 615), involving the
complex crime of kidnapping with murder, this tribunal applied the
provision of Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code and would have sentenced
the accused to death, were it not for one dissenting vote based not on the
applicability of Article 48, but on the question of jurisdiction. Said this
court:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
La pena que debe imponerse al acusado Parulan es la del delito mas grave
de secuestro en su grado maximo, o sea, pena capital. Pero el Magistrado
Sr. Tuason, consecuente con su opinion disidente en Parulan contra Rodas,
supra, no puede confirmar la pena capital impuesta por el Juzgado de
Primera Instancia de Manila que segun el no tenia jurisdiccion sobre la
presente causa. En vista de este voto disidente, el presidente del tribunal
Sr. Paras y tres magistrados aunque creen que el acusado Parulan, por las
pruebas presentadas, merece pena capital, con todo no pueden votar por la
comfirmacion porque el delito se cometio antes de la aprobacion de la Ley
de la Republica No. 296, que solo exige ocho votos para la imposicion de la
pena capital. Antomaticamente, por ministerio de la ley debe imponerse a
Parulan la pena inmediatamente inferior a la de muerte, que es la de
reclusion perpetua con las accesorias. (88 Phil., p. 624.)
Then in the case of People vs. Guillen * 47 Off. Gaz., 3433, involving the
complex crime of murder and multiple attempted murder committed by the
accused with a single act of hurling a hand grenade at President Roxas, this
tribunal in a per curiam decision, ignoring the aggravating circumstances
that attended the commission of the crime, applied the maximum of the
penalty for the more serious crime of murder in accordance with Article 48
of the Revised Penal Code and sentenced the accused to death. Other
instances and cases may be cited ad libitum to show that in this jurisdiction
and in this tribunal, the principle of pro reo was never entertained, much
less accepted.
Origin of pro reo principle
Up to the year 1908, the Spanish Penal Code had the following provisions
for complex crimes:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
Las disposiciones del articulo anterior no son aplicables en el caso de que
un solo hecho constituya dos o mas delitos, o cuando el uno de ellos sea
medio necesario para cometer el otro.
En estos casos solo se impondra la pena correspondiente al delito mas
grave, aplicandola en su grado maximo.
The above provisions were copied in our Penal Code of 1887 under Article
89 which reads thus:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
The provisions of the next preceding article are not applicable to cases in
which a single act constitutes two or more crimes, or when one offense is a
necessary means for committing the other.
In these cases, only the penalty of the more serious crime shall be
imposed, the same to be applied in its maximum degree.
On January 3, 1908, the Spanish Penal Code was amended, particularly
paragraph 2 of Article 90 thereof so as to add to said paragraph the
following clause:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
Hasta el limite que represente la suma de las dos que pudieran imponerse,
penando separadamente ambos delitos.
so that since January 1908, Article 90 of the Spanish Penal Code
reads:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
Las disposiciones del articulo anterior no son aplicables en el caso de que
un solo hecho constituya dos o mas delitos, o cuando el uno de ellos sea
medio necesario para cometer el otro.
En estos casos solo se impondra la pena correspondiente al delito mas
grave, aplicandola en eu grado maximo hasta el limite que represente la
suma de las dos que pudieran imponerse, penando separadamente ambos
delitos.
The amendment is the provision for the so called pro reo rule. But we never
accepted much less followed said innovation in the Philippines. We did not
amend Article 89 of our old Penal Code particularly paragraph 2 thereof so
as to add the clause:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
Hasta el limite que represente la suma de las dos que pudieran imponerse,
penando separadamente ambos delitos.
ART. 48. Penalty for complex crimes. When a single act constitutes two
or more grave or less felonies, or when an offense is a necessary means for
committing the other, the penalty for the most serious crime shall be
imposed, the same to be applied in its maximum period. (As amended by
Act No. 4000.)
The majority resolution makes a more or less extensive dissertation and
citation of authorities on the law of extradition, intended to show that
common crimes such as murder, etc., committed on the occasion of or in
the course of the commission of political crimes like sedition and rebellion,
are not subject to extradition. We believe that these citations and these
arguments are neither relevant nor applicable. All we can say is that a
murder committed in the course of a rebellion or sedition may be
considered a political crime in contemplation of the extradition law and that
a person accused of said murder is not subject to extradition. But a crime
may be considered political from the standpoint of the extradition law and
yet may be regarded by the country where committed as a common crime
separate and distinct from the rebellion or sedition in the course of which it
was committed, and, consequently, subject to prosecution. Moreover, the
fact that a murder committed in the course of a sedition or rebellion is
excluded from the scope of the extradition agreement between nations, is
proof and argument that were it not for its exclusion, the member nations
of the extradition agreement, where murders are committed in the course
of a rebellion or sedition may and would extradite the offenders, on the
theory that said murders are separate from and are not absorbed by the
rebellion or sedition; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryotherwise, there would be
no need for excluding such crimes of murder, arson, etc., committed during
a rebellion or sedition, from the scope of the extradition law. And among
In conclusion, I hold that under the law and under general principles
rebellion punished with a maximum penalty of twelve (12) years and fine
cannot possibly absorb a much more serious crimes like murder or
kidnapping which are capital offenses and carry the maximum penalty of
death. It is hard for the mind to grasp the idea that a person committing
one lone murder may be headed for the electric chair; chan
roblesvirtualawlibrarybut if perpetrates several murders, kidnappings,
arsons, and robberies and during their perpetration, was still committing
another crime, that of trying to overthrow his own government by force,
then all he gets is twelve years and fine. Since, the serious crimes like
multiple murder, robbery, arson, kidnapping, etc., committed during the
rebellion are not ingredients of, nor are they indispensable to the
commission of rebellion, and were but means freely selected by the rebels
to facilitate their commission of rebellion or to achieve and speed up their
realization of their object, which was to overthrow the government and
implant their own system said to be of communistic ideology, then under
Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code, the complex crime of rebellion with
murder, etc., was committed.
the relation between interpretation of the law by the courts and public
policy, said:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
Justice Holmes, in one of the aphorisms for which he is justly famous, said
that constitutional law, like other mortal contrivances, has to take some
chances. (Blinn vs. Nelson [1911] 222 U.S., 1.) If in the final decision of the
many grave questions which this case presents, the court must take a
chance, it should be, with a view to upholding the law, with a view to the
effectuation of the general governmental policy, and with a view to the
courts performing its duty in no narrow and bigoted sense, but with that
broad conception which will make the courts as progressive and effective a
force as are the other departments of the Government.
As a point which has been left for the end of this decision and which, in
case of doubt, would lead to the determination that section 2145 is valid, is
the attitude which the courts should assume towards the settled policy of
the Government. In a late decision with which we are in full accord, Gamble
vs. Vanderbilt University (200 Southwestern Reporter 510) the Chief of
Justice
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Tennessee
writes:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
We can see no objection to the application of public policy as a ratio
decidendi. Every really new question that comes before the courts is, in the
last analysis, determined on the theory, when not determined by
differentiation of the principle of a prior case or line of cases, or by the aid
of analogies furnished by such prior cases. In balancing conflicting
solutions, that one is perceived to tip the scales which the court believes
will best promote the public welfare in its probable operation as a general
rule or principle.
Now, by the majority resolution, this Court would spread the mantle of
immunity over all these serious crimes against persons and property on the
theory that they are all covered by, included in, and absorbed by the crime
of rebellion. Under this protective mantle extended by us, instead of
curbing and discouraging the commission of these common serious crimes
in accordance with public policy, the commission of said crimes would be
encouraged. No longer would evil-minded men, outlaws, bandits, hesitate
to kill and rob and kidnap, because by pretending to be rebels or to be
engaged in rebellion, their acts of atrocity would be covered by rebellion,
for which they would get, at most, twelve (12) years and fine. No longer
would the spectre of the death penalty and the electric chair hang sword of
Damocles-like over the heads of would be kidnappers, murderers and
arsonists because by merely claiming to have committed another additional
crime, rebellion, under the doctrine laid down by the majority resolution,
capital punishment for all capital crimes they have committed or may
commit, is automatically reduced to twelve (12) years and fine. It is evident
that the effect of the interpretation by this Court of the law on complex
crimes, in relation to rebellion and the common serious crimes committed
during and in the course thereof, runs counter to the settled public policy
on the subject.
Sad, indeed, is the role being played by this Tribunal in laying down a
doctrine of such far reaching consequences and in my opinion of such
baneful not to say disastrous effects on peace and order and personal
security, diametrically and utterly opposed to settled public policy, when
after all, we have now the opportunity and the choice of accepting and
adopting another view, another interpretation of the law on complex
crimes, to be more reasonable, more logical and certainly, more in
accordance with public policy, and more in keeping with peace and order,
personal security and the public welfare.
Endnotes:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
1. In the Andaya case the victim was a girl twelve years of age.
2. The information in the case at bar alleges that the acts therein set
forth were committed as a necessary means to commit the crime of
rebellion.
3. See, also the comentarios el Codigo Penal, by A. Quintano Ripolles
(Vol. I, pp. 396-397) and Derecho Penal, by Federico Puig Pea (Vol. 1, p.
289).
4. In the language of the information.
EN BANC
G.R. No. 92163 June 5, 1990
IN THE MATTER OF THE PETITION FOR HABEAS CORPUS. JUAN PONCE
ENRILE, petitioner
vs.
JUDGE JAIME SALAZAR (Presiding Judge of the Regional Trial Court of Quezon
City [Br. 103], SENIOR STATE PROSECUTOR AURELIO TRAMPE, PROSECUTOR
FERDINAND R. ABESAMIS, AND CITY ASSISTANT CITY PROSECUTOR
EULOGIO MANANQUIL, NATIONAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION DIRECTOR
ALFREDO LIM, BRIG. GEN. EDGAR DULA TORRES (Superintendent of the
Northern Police District) AND/ OR ANY AND ALL PERSONS WHO MAY HAVE
ACTUAL CUSTODY OVER THE PERSON OF JUAN PONCE ENRILE, respondents.
G.R. No. 92164 June 5, 1990
SPS. REBECCO E. PANLILIO AND ERLINDA E. PANLILIO, petitioners,
vs.
PROSECUTORS FERNANDO DE LEON, AURELIO C. TRAMPE, FFRDINAND R.
ABESAMIS, AND EULOGIO C. MANANQUIL, and HON. JAIME W. SALAZAR, JR.,
in his capacity as Presiding Judge, Regional Trial Court, Quezon City, Branch
103, respondents.
City Prosecutor Eulogio Mananquil, Jr., charging Senator Enrile, the spouses Rebecco
and Erlinda Panlilio, and Gregorio Honasan with the crime of rebellion with murder
and multiple frustrated murder allegedly committed during the period of the failed coup
attempt from November 29 to December 10, 1990. Senator Enrile was taken to and
held overnight at the NBI headquarters on Taft Avenue, Manila, without bail, none
having been recommended in the information and none fixed in the arrest warrant.
The following morning, February 28, 1990, he was brought to Camp Tomas Karingal in
Quezon City where he was given over to the custody of the Superintendent of the
Northern Police District, Brig. Gen. Edgardo Dula Torres. 3
notice, cash or surety bonds of P100,000.00 (for Senator Enrile) and P200,000.00 (for
the Panlilios), respectively. The Resolution stated that it was issued without prejudice
to a more extended resolution on the matter of the provisional liberty of the petitioners
and stressed that it was not passing upon the legal issues raised in both cases. Four
Members of the Court 9 voted against granting bail to Senator Enrile, and
two 10 against granting bail to the Panlilios.
On the same date of February 28, 1990, Senator Enrile, through counsel, filed the
petition for habeas corpusherein (which was followed by a supplemental petition filed
on March 2, 1990), alleging that he was deprived of his constitutional rights in being,
or having been:
The parties' oral and written pleas presented the Court with the following options:
(a) held to answer for criminal offense which does not exist in the
statute books;
(b) charged with a criminal offense in an information for which no
complaint was initially filed or preliminary investigation was
conducted, hence was denied due process;
(c) denied his right to bail; and
(d) arrested and detained on the strength of a warrant issued
without the judge who issued it first having personally determined
the existence of probable cause. 4
The Court issued the writ prayed for, returnable March 5, 1990 and set the plea for
hearing on March 6, 1990. 5On March 5, 1990, the Solicitor General filed a
consolidated return 6 for the respondents in this case and in G.R. No. 921647 Which
had been contemporaneously but separately filed by two of Senator Enrile's coaccused, the spouses Rebecco and Erlinda Panlilio, and raised similar questions. Said
return urged that the petitioners' case does not fall within the Hernandezruling
because-and this is putting it very simply-the information in Hernandez charged
murders and other common crimes committed as a necessary means for the
commission of rebellion, whereas the information against Sen. Enrile et al.charged
murder and frustrated murder committed on the occasion, but not in furtherance, of
rebellion. Stated otherwise, the Solicitor General would distinguish between the
complex crime ("delito complejo") arising from an offense being a necessary means
for committing another, which is referred to in the second clause of Article 48, Revised
Penal Code, and is the subject of the Hernandez ruling, and the compound crime
("delito compuesto") arising from a single act constituting two or more grave or less
grave offenses referred to in the first clause of the same paragraph, with
which Hernandez was not concerned and to which, therefore, it should not apply.
The parties were heard in oral argument, as scheduled, on March 6, 1990, after which
the Court issued its Resolution of the same date 8 granting Senator Enrile and the
Panlilio spouses provisional liberty conditioned upon their filing, within 24 hours from
The Court now addresses those issues insofar as they are raised and litigated in
Senator Enrile's petition, G.R. No. 92163.
necessary means for the commission of rebellion and that the ruling should not be
interpreted as prohibiting the complexing of rebellion with other common crimes
committed on the occasion, but not in furtherance, thereof. While four Members of the
Court felt that the proponents' arguments were not entirely devoid of merit, the
consensus was that they were not sufficient to overcome what appears to be the real
thrust of Hernandez to rule out the complexing of rebellion with any other offense
committed in its course under either of the aforecited clauses of Article 48, as is made
clear by the following excerpt from the majority opinion in that case:
There is one other reason-and a fundamental one at that-why
Article 48 of our Penal Code cannot be applied in the case at bar.
If murder were not complexed with rebellion, and the two crimes
were punished separately (assuming that this could be done), the
following penalties would be imposable upon the movant, namely:
(1) for the crime of rebellion, a fine not exceeding P20,000
and prision mayor, in the corresponding period, depending upon
the modifying circumstances present, but never exceeding 12
years of prision mayor, and (2) for the crime of murder, reclusion
temporal in its maximum period to death, depending upon the
modifying circumstances present. in other words, in the absence
of aggravating circumstances, the extreme penalty could not be
imposed upon him. However, under Article 48 said penalty would
have to be meted out to him, even in the absence of a single
aggravating circumstance. Thus, said provision, if construed in
conformity with the theory of the prosecution, would
be unfavorable to the movant.
Upon the other hand, said Article 48 was enacted for the purpose
of favoring the culprit, not of sentencing him to a penalty more
severe than that which would be proper if the several acts
performed by him were punished separately. In the words of
Rodriguez Navarro:
La unificacion de penas en los casos de
concurso de delitos a que hace referencia
este articulo (75 del Codigo de 1932), esta
basado francamente en el principio pro reo.'
(II Doctrina Penal del Tribunal Supremo de
Espana, p. 2168.)
We are aware of the fact that this observation refers to Article 71
(later 75) of the Spanish Penal Code (the counterpart of our
Article 48), as amended in 1908 and then in 1932, reading:
Las disposiciones del articulo anterior no son
aplicables en el caso de que un solo hecho
constituya dos o mas delitos, o cuando el uno
de ellos sea medio necesario para cometer el
otro.
be accepted as a correct proposition. But the question remains: Given the facts from
which this case arose, was a petition for habeas corpus in this Court the appropriate
vehicle for asserting a right to bail or vindicating its denial?
The criminal case before the respondent Judge was the normal venue for invoking the
petitioner's right to have provisional liberty pending trial and judgment. The original
jurisdiction to grant or deny bail rested with said respondent. The correct course was
for petitioner to invoke that jurisdiction by filing a petition to be admitted to bail,
claiming a right to bail per se by reason of the weakness of the evidence against him.
Only after that remedy was denied by the trial court should the review jurisdiction of
this Court have been invoked, and even then, not without first applying to the Court of
Appeals if appropriate relief was also available there.
Even acceptance of petitioner's premise that going by the Hernandez ruling, the
information charges a non-existent crime or, contrarily, theorizing on the same basis
that it charges more than one offense, would not excuse or justify his improper choice
of remedies. Under either hypothesis, the obvious recourse would have been a motion
to quash brought in the criminal action before the respondent Judge. 18
There thus seems to be no question that All the grounds upon which petitioner has
founded the present petition, whether these went into the substance of what is
charged in the information or imputed error or omission on the part of the prosecuting
panel or of the respondent Judge in dealing with the charges against him, were
originally justiciable in the criminal case before said Judge and should have been
brought up there instead of directly to this Court.
There was and is no reason to assume that the resolution of any of these questions
was beyond the ability or competence of the respondent Judge-indeed such an
assumption would be demeaning and less than fair to our trial courts; none whatever
to hold them to be of such complexity or transcendental importance as to disqualify
every court, except this Court, from deciding them; none, in short that would justify by
passing established judicial processes designed to orderly move litigation through the
hierarchy of our courts. Parenthentically, this is the reason behind the vote of four
Members of the Court against the grant of bail to petitioner: the view that the trial court
should not thus be precipitately ousted of its original jurisdiction to grant or deny bail,
and if it erred in that matter, denied an opportunity to correct its error. It makes no
difference that the respondent Judge here issued a warrant of arrest fixing no bail.
Immemorial practice sanctions simply following the prosecutor's recommendation
regarding bail, though it may be perceived as the better course for the judge motu
proprio to set a bail hearing where a capital offense is charged. 19 It is, in any event,
incumbent on the accused as to whom no bail has been recommended or fixed to
claim the right to a bail hearing and thereby put to proof the strength or weakness of
the evidence against him.
It is apropos to point out that the present petition has triggered a rush to this Court of
other parties in a similar situation, all apparently taking their cue from it, distrustful or
contemptuous of the efficacy of seeking recourse in the regular manner just outlined.
The proliferation of such pleas has only contributed to the delay that the petitioner
may have hoped to avoid by coming directly to this Court.
Not only because popular interest seems focused on the outcome of the present
petition, but also because to wash the Court's hand off it on jurisdictional grounds
would only compound the delay that it has already gone through, the Court now
decides the same on the merits. But in so doing, the Court cannot express too
strongly the view that said petition interdicted the ordered and orderly progression of
proceedings that should have started with the trial court and reached this Court only if
the relief appealed for was denied by the former and, in a proper case, by the Court of
Appeals on review.
fixed by said respondent for any of the petitioners, the corresponding bail bond flied
with this Court shall become functus oficio. No pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED.
Cruz, Gancayco and Regalado, JJ., concur.
Medialdea, J., concurs in G.R. No. 92164 but took no part in G.R. No. 92163.
Let it be made very clear that hereafter the Court will no longer countenance, but will
give short shrift to, pleas like the present, that clearly short-circuit the judicial process
and burden it with the resolution of issues properly within the original competence of
the lower courts. What has thus far been stated is equally applicable to and decisive
of the petition of the Panlilio spouses (G.R. No. 92164) which is virtually Identical to
that of petitioner Enrile in factualmilieu and is therefore determinable on the same
principles already set forth. Said spouses have uncontestedly pleaded 20 that warrants
of arrest issued against them as co-accused of petitioner Enrile in Criminal Case No.
90-10941, that when they appeared before NBI Director Alfredo Lim in the afternoon
of March 1, 1990, they were taken into custody and detained without bail on the
strength of said warrants in violation-they claim-of their constitutional rights.
It may be that in the light of contemporary events, the act of rebellion has lost that
quitessentiany quixotic quality that justifies the relative leniency with which it is
regarded and punished by law, that present-day rebels are less impelled by love of
country than by lust for power and have become no better than mere terrorists to
whom nothing, not even the sanctity of human life, is allowed to stand in the way of
their ambitions. Nothing so underscores this aberration as the rash of seemingly
senseless killings, bombings, kidnappings and assorted mayhem so much in the news
these days, as often perpetrated against innocent civilians as against the military, but
by and large attributable to, or even claimed by so-called rebels to be part of, an
ongoing rebellion.
It is enough to give anyone pause-and the Court is no exception-that not even the
crowded streets of our capital City seem safe from such unsettling violence that is
disruptive of the public peace and stymies every effort at national economic recovery.
There is an apparent need to restructure the law on rebellion, either to raise the
penalty therefor or to clearly define and delimit the other offenses to be considered as
absorbed thereby, so that it cannot be conveniently utilized as the umbrella for every
sort of illegal activity undertaken in its name. The Court has no power to effect such
change, for it can only interpret the law as it stands at any given time, and what is
needed lies beyond interpretation. Hopefully, Congress will perceive the need for
promptly seizing the initiative in this matter, which is properly within its province.
WHEREFORE, the Court reiterates that based on the doctrine enunciated in People
vs. Hernandez, the questioned information filed against petitioners Juan Ponce Enrile
and the spouses Rebecco and Erlinda Panlilio must be read as charging simple
rebellion only, hence said petitioners are entitled to bail, before final conviction, as a
matter of right. The Court's earlier grant of bail to petitioners being merely provisional
in character, the proceedings in both cases are ordered REMANDED to the
respondent Judge to fix the amount of bail to be posted by the petitioners. Once bail is
Separate Opinions
The Court, however, must have jurisdiction to issue the process. In this case, the
Court below must be deemed to have been ousted of jurisdiction when it illegally
curtailed petitioner's liberty. Habeas corpus is thus available.
The writ of habeas corpus is available to relieve persons from
unlawful restraint. But where the detention or confinement is the
result of a process issued by the court or judge or by virtue of a
judgment or sentence, the writ ordinarily cannot be availed of. It
may still be invoked though if the process, judgment or sentence
proceeded from a court or tribunal the jurisdiction of which may
be assailed. Even if it had authority to act at the outset, it is now
the prevailing doctrine that a deprivation of constitutional right, if
shown to exist, would oust it of jurisdiction. In such a case,
habeas corpus could be relied upon to regain one's
liberty (Celeste vs. People, 31 SCRA 391) [Emphasis emphasis].
The Petition for habeas corpus was precisely premised on the violation of petitioner's
constitutional right to bail inasmuch as rebellion, under the present state of the law, is
a bailable offense and the crime for which petitioner stands accused of and for which
he was denied bail is non-existent in law.
While litigants should, as a rule, ascend the steps of the judicial ladder, nothing should
stop this Court from taking cognizance of petitions brought before it raising urgent
constitutional issues, any procedural flaw notwithstanding.
The rules on habeas corpus are to be liberally construed
(Ganaway v. Quilen, 42 Phil. 805), the writ of habeas
corpus being the fundamental instrument for safeguarding
individual freedom against arbitrary and lawless state action. The
scope and flexibility of the writ-its capacity to reach all manner of
illegal detention-its ability to cut through barriers of form and
procedural mazes-have always been emphasized and jealously
guarded by courts and lawmakers (Gumabon v. Director of
Bureau of Prisons, 37 SCRA 420) [emphasis supplied].
The proliferation of cases in this Court, which followed in the wake of this Petition, was
brought about by the insistence of the prosecution to charge the crime of Rebellion
complexed with other common offenses notwithstanding the fact that this Court had
not yet ruled on the validity of that charge and had granted provisional liberty to
petitioner.
If, indeed, it is desired to make the crime of Rebellion a capital offense (now
punishable by reclusion perpetua), the remedy lies in legislation. But Article 142-A 1 of
the Revised Penal Code, along with P.D. No. 942, were repealed, for being
"repressive," by EO No. 187 on 5 June 1987. EO 187 further explicitly provided that
Article 134 (and others enumerated) of the Revised Penal Code was "restored to its
full force and effect as it existed before said amendatory decrees." Having been so
repealed, this Court is bereft of power to legislate into existence, under the guise of reexamining a settled doctrine, a "creature unknown in law"- the complex crime of
Rebellion with Murder. The remand of the case to the lower Court for further
proceedings is in order. The Writ of Habeas Corpus has served its purpose.
And fifth, the attempts to distinguish this case from the Hernandez case by stressing
that the killings charged in the information were committed "on the occasion of, but not
a necessary means for, the commission of rebellion" result in outlandish
consequences and ignore the basic nature of rebellion. Thus, under the prosecution
theory a bomb dropped on PTV-4 which kills government troopers results in simple
rebellion because the act is a necessary means to make the rebellion succeed.
However, if the same bomb also kills some civilians in the neighborhood, the dropping
of the bomb becomes rebellion complexed with murder because the killing of civilians
is not necessary for the success of a rebellion and, therefore, the killings are only "on
the occasion of but not a 'necessary means for' the commission of rebellion.
This argument is puerile.
The crime of rebellion consists of many acts. The dropping of one bomb cannot be
isolated as a separate crime of rebellion. Neither should the dropping of one hundred
bombs or the firing of thousands of machine gun bullets be broken up into a hundred
or thousands of separate offenses, if each bomb or each bullet happens to result in
the destruction of life and property. The same act cannot be punishable by separate
penalties depending on what strikes the fancy of prosecutors-punishment for the
killing of soldiers or retribution for the deaths of civilians. The prosecution also loses
sight of the regrettable fact that in total war and in rebellion the killing of civilians, the
laying waste of civilian economies, the massacre of innocent people, the blowing up of
passenger airplanes, and other acts of terrorism are all used by those engaged in
rebellion. We cannot and should not try to ascertain the intent of rebels for each single
act unless the act is plainly not connected to the rebellion. We cannot use Article 48 of
the Revised Penal Code in lieu of still-to- be-enacted legislation. The killing of civilians
during a rebel attack on military facilities furthers the rebellion and is part of the
rebellion.
The trial court was certainly aware of all the above considerations. I cannot
understand why the trial Judge issued the warrant of arrest which categorically states
therein that the accused was not entitled to bail. The petitioner was compelled to come
to us so he would not be arrested without bail for a nonexistent crime. The trial court
forgot to apply an established doctrine of the Supreme Court. Worse, it issued a
warrant which reversed 34 years of established procedure based on a well-known
Supreme Court ruling.
this particular case, it should have been the Solicitor General coming to this Court to
question the lower court's rejection of the application for a warrant of arrest without
bail. It should have been the Solicitor-General provoking the issue of re-examination
instead of the petitioners asking to be freed from their arrest for a non-existent crime.
The principle bears repeating:
Respondent Court of Appeals really was devoid of any choice at
all. It could not have ruled in any other way on the legal question
raised. This Tribunal having spoken, its duty was to obey. It is as
simple as that. There is relevance to this excerpt from Barrera v.
Barrera. (L-31589, July 31, 1970, 34 SCRA 98) 'The delicate task
of ascertaining the significance that attaches to a constitutional or
statutory provision, an executive order, a procedural norm or a
municipal ordinance is committed to the judiciary. It thus
discharges a role no less crucial than that appertaining to the
other two departments in the maintenance of the rule of law. To
assure stability in legal relations and avoid confusion, it has to
speak with one voice. It does so with finality, logically and rightly,
through the highest judicial organ, this Court. What it says then
should be definitive and authoritative, binding on those occupying
the lower ranks in the judicial hierarchy. They have to defer and to
submit.' (Ibid, 107. The opinion of Justice Laurel in People v. Vera,
65 Phil. 56 [1937] was cited). The ensuing paragraph of the
opinion in Barrera further emphasizes the point: Such a thought
was reiterated in an opinion of Justice J.B.L. Reyes and further
emphasized in these words: 'Judge Gaudencio Cloribel need not
be reminded that the Supreme Court, by tradition and in our
system of judicial administration, has the last word on what the
law is; it is the final arbiter of any justifiable controversy. There is
only one Supreme Court from whose decisions all other courts
should take their bearings. (Ibid. Justice J.B.L. Reyes spoke thus
in Albert v. Court of First Instance of Manila (Br. VI), L-26364, May
29, 1968, 23 SCRA 948, 961. (Tugade v. Court of Appeals, 85
SCRA 226 [1978]. See also Albert v. Court of First Instance, 23
SCRA 948 [1968] and Vir-Jen Shipping and Marine Services, Inc.
v. NLRC, 125 SCRA 577 [1983])
All courts should remember that they form part of an independent judicial system; they
do not belong to the prosecution service. A court should never play into the hands of
the prosecution and blindly comply with its erroneous manifestations. Faced with an
information charging a manifestly non-existent crime, the duty of a trial court is to
throw it out. Or, at the very least and where possible, make it conform to the law.
I find the situation in Spouses Panlilio v. Prosecutors Fernando de Leon, et al. even
more inexplicable. In the case of the Panlilios, any probable cause to commit the nonexistent crime of rebellion complexed with murder exists only in the minds of the
prosecutors, not in the records of the case.
A lower court cannot re-examine and reverse a decision of the Supreme Court
especially a decision consistently followed for 34 years. Where a Judge disagrees with
a Supreme Court ruling, he is free to express his reservations in the body of his
decision, order, or resolution. However, any judgment he renders, any order he
prescribes, and any processes he issues must follow the Supreme Court precedent. A
trial court has no jurisdiction to reverse or ignore precedents of the Supreme Court. In
I have gone over the records and pleadings furnished to the members of the Supreme
Court. I listened intently to the oral arguments during the hearing and it was quite
apparent that the constitutional requirement of probable cause was not satisfied. In
fact, in answer to my query for any other proofs to support the issuance of a warrant of
arrest, the answer was that the evidence would be submitted in due time to the trial
court.
The spouses Panlilio and one parent have been in the restaurant business for
decades. Under the records of these petitions, any restaurant owner or hotel manager
who serves food to rebels is a co-conspirator in the rebellion. The absurdity of this
proposition is apparent if we bear in mind that rebels ride in buses and jeepneys, eat
meals in rural houses when mealtime finds them in the vicinity, join weddings, fiestas,
and other parties, play basketball with barrio youths, attend masses and church
services and otherwise mix with people in various gatherings. Even if the hosts
recognize them to be rebels and fail to shoo them away, it does not necessarily follow
that the former are co-conspirators in a rebellion.
The only basis for probable cause shown by the records of the Panlilio case is the
alleged fact that the petitioners served food to rebels at the Enrile household and a
hotel supervisor asked two or three of their waiters, without reason, to go on a
vacation. Clearly, a much, much stronger showing of probable cause must be shown.
In Salonga v. Cruz Pao, 134 SCRA 438 (1985), then Senator Salonga was charged
as a conspirator in the heinous bombing of innocent civilians because the man who
planted the bomb had, sometime earlier, appeared in a group photograph taken during
a birthday party in the United States with the Senator and other guests. It was a case
of conspiracy proved through a group picture. Here, it is a case of conspiracy sought
to proved through the catering of food.
The Court in Salonga stressed:
The purpose of a preliminary investigation is to secure the
innocent against hasty, malicious and oppressive prosecution,
and to protect him from an open and public accusation of crime,
from the trouble, expense and anxiety of a public trial, and also to
protect the state from useless and expensive trials. (Trocio v.
Manta, 118 SCRA 241; citing Hashimn v. Boncan, 71 Phil. 216).
The right to a preliminary investigation is a statutory grant, and to
withhold it would be to transgress constitutional due process.
(See People v. Oandasa, 25 SCRA 277) However, in order to
satisfy the due process clause it is not enough that the preliminary
investigation is conducted in the sense of making sure that a
transgressor shall not escape with impunity. A preliminary
investigation serves not only the purposes of the State. More
important, it is a part of the guarantees of freedom and fair play
which are birthrights of all who live in our country. It is, therefore,
imperative upon the fiscal or the judge as the case may be, to
relieve the accused from the pain of going through a trial once it is
ascertained that the evidence is insufficient to sustain a prima
facie case or that no probable cause exists to form a sufficient
belief as to the guilt of the accused. Although there is no general
formula or fixed rule for the determination of probable cause since
the same must be decided in the light of the conditions obtaining
in given situations and its existence depends to a large degree
upon the finding or opinion of the judge conducting the
examination, such a finding should not disregard the facts before
the judge nor run counter to the clear dictates of reason (See La
"Penalty for Rebellion or Insurrection.") sets out a listing of acts or particular measures
which appear to fall under the rubric of rebellion or insurrection: "engaging in war
against the forces of the Government, destroying property or committing serious
violence, exacting contributions or diverting public funds from the lawful purpose for
which they have been appropriated." Are these modalities of rebellion generally? Or
are they particular modes by which those "who promote [ ], maintain [ ] or head [ ] a
rebellion or insurrection" commit rebellion, or particular modes of participation in a
rebellion by public officers or employees? Clearly, the scope of the legal concept of
rebellion relates to the distinction between, on the one hand, the indispensable acts or
ingredients of the crime of rebellion under the Revised Penal Code and, on the other
hand, differing optional modes of seeking to carry out the political or social objective of
the rebellion or insurrection.
The difficulty that is at once raised by any effort to examine once more even the above
threshold questions is that the results of such re-examination may well be that acts
which under the Hernandez doctrine are absorbed into rebellion, may be
characterized as separate or discrete offenses which, as a matter of law, can either be
prosecuted separately from rebellion or prosecuted under the provisions of Article 48
of the Revised Penal Code, which (both Clause 1 and Clause 2 thereof) clearly
envisage the existence of at least two (2) distinct offenses. To reach such a conclusion
in the case at bar, would, as far as I can see, result in colliding with the fundamental
non-retroactivity principle (Article 4, Civil Code; Article 22, Revised Penal Code; both
in relation to Article 8, Civil Code).
The non-retroactivity rule applies to statutes principally. But, statutes do not exist in
the abstract but rather bear upon the lives of people with the specific form given them
by judicial decisions interpreting their norms. Judicial decisions construing statutory
norms give specific shape and content to such norms. In time, the statutory norms
become encrusted with the glosses placed upon them by the courts and the glosses
become integral with the norms (Cf Caltex v. Palomar, 18 SCRA 247 [1966]). Thus,
while in legal theory, judicial interpretation of a statute becomes part of the law as of
the date that the law was originally enacted, I believe this theory is not to be applied
rigorously where a new judicial doctrine is announced, in particular one overruling a
previous existing doctrine of long standing (here, 36 years) and most specially not
where the statute construed is criminal in nature and the new doctrine is more
onerous for the accused than the pre-existing one (People v. Jabinal, 55 SCRA 607
[1974]; People v. Licera, 65 SCRA 270 [1975]; Gumabon v. Director of Prisons, 37
SCRA 420 [1971]). Moreover, the non-retroactivity rule whether in respect of
legislative acts or judicial decisions has constitutional implications. The prevailing rule
in the United States is that a judicial decision that retroactively renders an act criminal
or enhances the severity of the penalty prescribed for an offense, is vulnerable to
constitutional challenge based upon the rule against ex post facto laws and the due
process clause (Bouie v. City of Columbia, 378 US 347,12 L. Ed. 2d 894 [1964]; Marks
v. U.S., 43 US 188, 51 L. Ed. 2d 260 [1977]; Devine v. New Mexico Department of
Corrections, 866 F. 2d 339 [1989]).
It is urged by the Solicitor General that the non-retroactivity principle does not present
any real problem for the reason that the Hernandez doctrine was based upon Article
48, second clause, of the Revised Penal Code and not upon the first clause thereof,
while it is precisely the first clause of Article 48 that the Government here invokes. It is,
however, open to serious doubt whether Hernandez can reasonably be so simply and
sharply characterized. And assuming the Hernandez could be so characterized,
subsequent cases refer to the Hernandezdoctrine in terms which do not distinguish
clearly between the first clause and the second clause of Article 48 (e.g., People v.
Geronimo, 100 Phil. 90 [1956]; People v. Rodriguez, 107 Phil. 659 [1960]). Thus, it
appears to me that the critical question would be whether a man of ordinary
intelligence would have necessarily read or understood the Hernandez doctrine as
referring exclusively to Article 48, second clause. Put in slightly different terms, the
important question would be whether the new doctrine here proposed by the
Government could fairly have been derived by a man of average intelligence (or
counsel of average competence in the law) from an examination of Articles 134 and
135 of the Revised Penal Code as interpreted by the Court in the Hernandez and
subsequent cases. To formulate the question ill these terms would almost be to
compel a negative answer, especially in view of the conclusions reached by the Court
and its several Members today.
Finally, there appears to be no question that the new doctrine that the Government
would have us discover for the first time since the promulgation of the Revised Penal
Code in 1932, would be more onerous for the respondent accused than the simple
application of the Hernandez doctrine that murders which have been committed on the
occasion of and in furtherance of the crime of rebellion must be deemed absorbed in
the offense of simple rebellion.
I agree therefore that the information in this case must be viewed as charging only the
crime of simple rebellion.
modes of seizing the powers of the duly constituted Government not contemplated in
Articles 134 and 135 of the Revised Penal Code and their consequent effects on the
lives of our people. The doctrine was good law then, but I believe that there is a
certain aspect of the Hernandez doctrine that needs clarification.
With all due respect to the views of my brethren in the Court, I believe that the Court,
in the instant case, should have further considered that distinction between acts or
offenses which are indispensable in the commission of rebellion, on the one hand, and
those acts or offenses that are merely necessary but not indispensable in the
commission of rebellion, on the other. The majority of the Court is correct in adopting,
albeit impliedly, the view in Hernandez case that when an offense perpetrated as a
necessary means of committing another, which is an element of the latter, the
resulting interlocking crimes should be considered as only one simple offense and
must be deemed outside the operation of the complex crime provision (Article 48) of
the Revised Penal Code. As in the case of Hernandez, the Court, however, failed in
the instant case to distinguish what is indispensable from what is merely necessary in
the commission of an offense, resulting thus in the rule that common crimes like
murder, arson, robbery, etc. committed in the course or on the occasion of rebellion
are absorbed or included in the latter as elements thereof.
The relevance of the distinction is significant, more particularly, if applied to
contemporaneous events happening in our country today. Theoretically, a crime which
is indispensable in the commission of another must necessarily be an element of the
latter; but a crime that is merely necessary but not indispensable in the commission of
another is not an element of the latter, and if and when actually committed, brings the
interlocking crime within the operation of the complex crime provision (Art. 48) of the
Revised Penal Code. With that distinction, common crimes committed against
Government forces and property in the course of rebellion are properly considered
indispensable overt acts of rebellion and are logically absorbed in it as virtual
ingredients or elements thereof, but common crimes committed against the civilian
population in the course or on the occasion of rebellion and in furtherance thereof,
may be necessary but not indispensable in committing the latter, and may, therefore,
not be considered as elements of the said crime of rebellion. To illustrate, the deaths
occurring during armed confrontation or clashes between government forces and the
rebels are absorbed in the rebellion, and would be those resulting from the bombing of
military camps and installations, as these acts are indispensable in carrying out the
rebellion. But deliberately shooting down an unarmed innocent civilian to instill fear or
create chaos among the people, although done in the furtherance of the rebellion,
should not be absorbed in the crime of rebellion as the felonious act is merely
necessary, but not indispensable. In the latter case, Article 48 of the Revised Penal
Code should apply.
The occurrence of a coup d' etat in our country as a mode of seizing the powers of the
duly-constituted government by staging surprise attacks or occupying centers of
powers, of which this Court should take judicial notice, has introduced a new
dimension to the interpretation of the provisions on rebellion and insurrection in the
Revised Penal Code. Generally, as a mode of seizing the powers of the duly
constituted government, it falls within the contemplation of rebellion under the Revised
Penal Code, but, strictly construed, a coup d'etat per se is a class by itself. The
manner of its execution and the extent and magnitude of its effects on the lives of the
people distinguish a coup d'etat from the traditional definition and modes of
commission attached by the Revised Penal Code to the crime of rebellion as applied
by the Court to the communist-inspired rebellion of the 1950's. A coup d'etat may be
executed successfully without its perpetrators resorting to the commission of other
serious crimes such as murder, arson, kidnapping, robbery, etc. because of the
element of surprise and the precise timing of its execution. In extreme cases where
murder, arson, robbery, and other common crimes are committed on the occasion of a
coup d' etat, the distinction referred to above on what is necessary and what is
indispensable in the commission of the coup d'etat should be painstakingly considered
as the Court should have done in the case of herein petitioners.
I concur in the result insofar as the other issues are resolved by the Court but I take
exception to the vote of the majority on the broad application of the Hernandez
doctrine.
BIDIN, J., concurring and dissenting:
I concur with the majority opinion except as regards the dispositive portion thereof
which orders the remand of the case to the respondent judge for further proceedings
to fix the amount of bail to be posted by the petitioner.
I submit that the proceedings need not be remanded to the respondent judge for the
purpose of fixing bail since we have construed the indictment herein as charging
simple rebellion, an offense which is bailable. Consequently,habeas corpus is the
proper remedy available to petitioner as an accused who had been charged with
simple rebellion, a bailable offense but who had been denied his right to bail by the
respondent judge in violation of petitioner's constitutional right to bail. In view thereof,
the responsibility of fixing the amount of bail and approval thereof when filed, devolves
upon us, if complete relief is to be accorded to petitioner in the instant proceedings.
It is indubitable that before conviction, admission to bail is a matter of right to the
defendant, accused before the Regional Trial Court of an offense less than capital
(Section 13 Article III, Constitution and Section 3, Rule 114). Petitioner is, before Us,
on a petition for habeas corpus praying, among others, for his provisional release on
bail. Since the offense charged (construed as simple rebellion) admits of bail, it is
incumbent upon us m the exercise of our jurisdiction over the petition for habeas
corpus (Section 5 (1), Article VIII, Constitution; Section 2, Rule 102), to grant petitioner
his right to bail and having admitted him to bail, to fix the amount thereof in such sums
as the court deems reasonable. Thereafter, the rules require that "the proceedings
together with the bond" shall forthwith be certified to the respondent trial court (Section
14, Rule 102).
Accordingly, the cash bond in the amount of P 100,000.00 posted by petitioner for his
provisional release pursuant to our resolution dated March 6, 1990 should now be
deemed and admitted as his bail bond for his provisional release in the case (simple
rebellion) pending before the respondent judge, without necessity of a remand for
further proceedings, conditioned for his (petitioner's) appearance before the trial court
to abide its order or judgment in the said case.
The present cases are to be distinguished from the Hernandez case in at least one (1)
material respect. In theHernandez case, this Court was confronted with an appealed
case, i.e., Hernandez had been convicted by the trial court of the complex crime of
rebellion with murder, arson and robbery, and his plea to be released on bail before
the Supreme Court, pending appeal, gave birth to the now
celebrated Hernandez doctrine that the crime of rebellion complexed with murder,
arson and robbery does not exist. In the present cases, on the other hand, the Court is
confronted with an original case, i.e., where an information has been recently filed in
the trial court and the petitioners have not even pleaded thereto.
Furthermore, the Supreme Court, in the Hernandez case, was "ground-breaking" on
the issue of whether rebellion can be complexed with murder, arson, robbery, etc. In
the present cases, on the other hand, the prosecution and the lower court, not only
had the Hernandez doctrine (as case law), but Executive Order No. 187 of President
Corazon C. Aquino dated 5 June 1987 (as statutory law) to bind them to the legal
proposition that the crime of rebellion complexed with murder, and multiple frustrated
murder does not exist.
And yet, notwithstanding these unmistakable and controlling beacon lights-absent
when this Court laid down theHernandez doctrine-the prosecution has insisted in
filing, and the lower court has persisted in hearing, an information charging the
petitioners with rebellion complexed with murder an multiple frustrated murder. That
information is clearly a nullity and plainly void ab initio. Its head should not be allowed
to surface. As a nullity in substantive law, it charges nothing; it has given rise to
nothing. The warrants of arrest issued pursuant thereto are as null and void as the
information on which they are anchored. And, since the entire question of the
information's validity is before the Court in these habeas corpus cases, I venture to
say that the information is fatally defective,even under procedural law, because it
charges more than one (1) offense (Sec. 13, Rule 110, Rules of Court).
I submit then that it is not for this Court to energize a dead and, at best, fatally decrepit
information by labelling or "baptizing" it differently from what it announces itself to be.
The prosecution must file an entirely new and properinformation, for this entire
exercise to merit the serious consideration of the courts.
ACCORDINGLY, I vote to GRANT the petitions, QUASH the warrants of arrest, and
ORDER the information for rebellion complexed with murder and multiple frustrated
murder in Criminal Case Nos. 90-10941, RTC of Quezon City, DISMISSED.
Consequently, the petitioners should be ordered permanently released and their bails
cancelled.
Paras, J., concurs.
Separate Opinions
MELENCIO-HERRERA, J., concurring:
I join my colleagues in holding that the Hernandez doctrine, which has been with us
for the past three decades, remains good law and, thus, should remain undisturbed,
despite periodic challenges to it that, ironically, have only served to strengthen its
pronouncements.
I take exception to the view, however, that habeas corpus was not the proper remedy.
Had the Information filed below charged merely the simple crime of Rebellion, that
proposition could have been plausible. But that Information charged Rebellion
complexed with Murder and Multiple Frustrated Murder, a crime which does not exist
in our statute books. The charge was obviously intended to make the penalty for the
most serious offense in its maximum period imposable upon the offender pursuant to
Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code. Thus, no bail was recommended in the
Information nor was any prescribed in the Warrant of Arrest issued by the Trial Court.
Under the attendant circumstances, therefore, to have filed a Motion to Quash before
the lower Court would not have brought about the speedy relief from unlawful restraint
that petitioner was seeking. During the pendency of said Motion before the lower
Court, petitioner could have continued to languish in detention. Besides, the Writ
ofHabeas Corpus may still issue even if another remedy, which is less effective, may
be availed of (Chavez vs. Court of Appeals, 24 SCRA 663).
It is true that habeas corpus would ordinarily not he when a person is under custody
by virtue of a process issued by a Court.
The Court, however, must have jurisdiction to issue the process. In this case, the
Court below must be deemed to have been ousted of jurisdiction when it illegally
curtailed petitioner's liberty. Habeas corpus is thus available.
The writ of habeas corpus is available to relieve persons from
unlawful restraint. But where the detention or confinement is the
result of a process issued by the court or judge or by virtue of a
judgment or sentence, the writ ordinarily cannot be availed of. It
may still be invoked though if the process, judgment or sentence
proceeded from a court or tribunal the jurisdiction of which may
be assailed. Even if it had authority to act at the outset, it is now
the prevailing doctrine that a deprivation of constitutional right, if
shown to exist, would oust it of jurisdiction. In such a case,
habeas corpus could be relied upon to regain one's
liberty (Celeste vs. People, 31 SCRA 391) [Emphasis emphasis].
The Petition for habeas corpus was precisely premised on the violation of petitioner's
constitutional right to bail inasmuch as rebellion, under the present state of the law, is
a bailable offense and the crime for which petitioner stands accused of and for which
he was denied bail is non-existent in law.
While litigants should, as a rule, ascend the steps of the judicial ladder, nothing should
stop this Court from taking cognizance of petitions brought before it raising urgent
constitutional issues, any procedural flaw notwithstanding.
The rules on habeas corpus are to be liberally construed
(Ganaway v. Quilen, 42 Phil. 805), the writ of habeas
corpus being the fundamental instrument for safeguarding
individual freedom against arbitrary and lawless state action. The
scope and flexibility of the writ-its capacity to reach all manner of
illegal detention-its ability to cut through barriers of form and
procedural mazes-have always been emphasized and jealously
guarded by courts and lawmakers (Gumabon v. Director of
Bureau of Prisons, 37 SCRA 420) [emphasis supplied].
The proliferation of cases in this Court, which followed in the wake of this Petition, was
brought about by the insistence of the prosecution to charge the crime of Rebellion
complexed with other common offenses notwithstanding the fact that this Court had
not yet ruled on the validity of that charge and had granted provisional liberty to
petitioner.
If, indeed, it is desired to make the crime of Rebellion a capital offense (now
punishable by reclusion perpetua), the remedy lies in legislation. But Article 142-A 1 of
the Revised Penal Code, along with P.D. No. 942, were repealed, for being
"repressive," by EO No. 187 on 5 June 1987. EO 187 further explicitly provided that
Article 134 (and others enumerated) of the Revised Penal Code was "restored to its
full force and effect as it existed before said amendatory decrees." Having been so
repealed, this Court is bereft of power to legislate into existence, under the guise of reexamining a settled doctrine, a "creature unknown in law"- the complex crime of
Rebellion with Murder. The remand of the case to the lower Court for further
proceedings is in order. The Writ of Habeas Corpus has served its purpose.
GUTIERREZ, JR., J., concurring:
I join the Court's decision to grant the petition. In reiterating the rule that under existing
law rebellion may not be complexed with murder, the Court emphasizes that it cannot
legislate a new-crime into existence nor prescribe a penalty for its commission. That
function is exclusively for Congress.
I write this separate opinion to make clear how I view certain issues arising from these
cases, especially on how the defective informations filed by the prosecutors should
have been treated.
I agree with the ponente that a petition for habeas corpus is ordinarily not the proper
procedure to assert the right to bail. Under the special circumstances of this case,
however, the petitioners had no other recourse. They had to come to us.
First, the trial court was certainly aware of the decision in People v. Hernandez, 99
Phil. 515 (1956) that there is no such crime in our statute books as rebellion
passenger airplanes, and other acts of terrorism are all used by those engaged in
rebellion. We cannot and should not try to ascertain the intent of rebels for each single
act unless the act is plainly not connected to the rebellion. We cannot use Article 48 of
the Revised Penal Code in lieu of still-to- be-enacted legislation. The killing of civilians
during a rebel attack on military facilities furthers the rebellion and is part of the
rebellion.
The trial court was certainly aware of all the above considerations. I cannot
understand why the trial Judge issued the warrant of arrest which categorically states
therein that the accused was not entitled to bail. The petitioner was compelled to come
to us so he would not be arrested without bail for a nonexistent crime. The trial court
forgot to apply an established doctrine of the Supreme Court. Worse, it issued a
warrant which reversed 34 years of established procedure based on a well-known
Supreme Court ruling.
All courts should remember that they form part of an independent judicial system; they
do not belong to the prosecution service. A court should never play into the hands of
the prosecution and blindly comply with its erroneous manifestations. Faced with an
information charging a manifestly non-existent crime, the duty of a trial court is to
throw it out. Or, at the very least and where possible, make it conform to the law.
A lower court cannot re-examine and reverse a decision of the Supreme Court
especially a decision consistently followed for 34 years. Where a Judge disagrees with
a Supreme Court ruling, he is free to express his reservations in the body of his
decision, order, or resolution. However, any judgment he renders, any order he
prescribes, and any processes he issues must follow the Supreme Court precedent. A
trial court has no jurisdiction to reverse or ignore precedents of the Supreme Court. In
this particular case, it should have been the Solicitor General coming to this Court to
question the lower court's rejection of the application for a warrant of arrest without
bail. It should have been the Solicitor-General provoking the issue of re-examination
instead of the petitioners asking to be freed from their arrest for a non-existent crime.
The principle bears repeating:
Respondent Court of Appeals really was devoid of any choice at
all. It could not have ruled in any other way on the legal question
raised. This Tribunal having spoken, its duty was to obey. It is as
simple as that. There is relevance to this excerpt from Barrera v.
Barrera. (L-31589, July 31, 1970, 34 SCRA 98) 'The delicate task
of ascertaining the significance that attaches to a constitutional or
statutory provision, an executive order, a procedural norm or a
municipal ordinance is committed to the judiciary. It thus
discharges a role no less crucial than that appertaining to the
other two departments in the maintenance of the rule of law. To
assure stability in legal relations and avoid confusion, it has to
speak with one voice. It does so with finality, logically and rightly,
through the highest judicial organ, this Court. What it says then
should be definitive and authoritative, binding on those occupying
the lower ranks in the judicial hierarchy. They have to defer and to
The Court is not, in any way, preventing the Government from using more effective
weapons to suppress rebellion. If the Government feels that the current situation calls
for the imposition of more severe penalties like death or the creation of new crimes
like rebellion complexed with murder, the remedy is with Congress, not the courts.
I, therefore, vote to GRANT the petitions and to ORDER the respondent court to
DISMISS the void informations for a non-existent crime.
non-retroactivity principle (Article 4, Civil Code; Article 22, Revised Penal Code; both
in relation to Article 8, Civil Code).
The non-retroactivity rule applies to statutes principally. But, statutes do not exist in
the abstract but rather bear upon the lives of people with the specific form given them
by judicial decisions interpreting their norms. Judicial decisions construing statutory
norms give specific shape and content to such norms. In time, the statutory norms
become encrusted with the glosses placed upon them by the courts and the glosses
become integral with the norms (Cf Caltex v. Palomar, 18 SCRA 247 [1966]). Thus,
while in legal theory, judicial interpretation of a statute becomes part of the law as of
the date that the law was originally enacted, I believe this theory is not to be applied
rigorously where a new judicial doctrine is announced, in particular one overruling a
previous existing doctrine of long standing (here, 36 years) and most specially not
where the statute construed is criminal in nature and the new doctrine is more
onerous for the accused than the pre-existing one (People v. Jabinal, 55 SCRA 607
[1974]; People v. Licera, 65 SCRA 270 [1975]; Gumabon v. Director of Prisons, 37
SCRA 420 [1971]). Moreover, the non-retroactivity rule whether in respect of
legislative acts or judicial decisions has constitutional implications. The prevailing rule
in the United States is that a judicial decision that retroactively renders an act criminal
or enhances the severity of the penalty prescribed for an offense, is vulnerable to
constitutional challenge based upon the rule against ex post facto laws and the due
process clause (Bouie v. City of Columbia, 378 US 347,12 L. Ed. 2d 894 [1964]; Marks
v. U.S., 43 US 188, 51 L. Ed. 2d 260 [1977]; Devine v. New Mexico Department of
Corrections, 866 F. 2d 339 [1989]).
It is urged by the Solicitor General that the non-retroactivity principle does not present
any real problem for the reason that the Hernandez doctrine was based upon Article
48, second clause, of the Revised Penal Code and not upon the first clause thereof,
while it is precisely the first clause of Article 48 that the Government here invokes. It is,
however, open to serious doubt whether Hernandez can reasonably be so simply and
sharply characterized. And assuming the Hernandez could be so characterized,
subsequent cases refer to the Hernandezdoctrine in terms which do not distinguish
clearly between the first clause and the second clause of Article 48 (e.g., People v.
Geronimo, 100 Phil. 90 [1956]; People v. Rodriguez, 107 Phil. 659 [1960]). Thus, it
appears to me that the critical question would be whether a man of ordinary
intelligence would have necessarily read or understood the Hernandez doctrine as
referring exclusively to Article 48, second clause. Put in slightly different terms, the
important question would be whether the new doctrine here proposed by the
Government could fairly have been derived by a man of average intelligence (or
counsel of average competence in the law) from an examination of Articles 134 and
135 of the Revised Penal Code as interpreted by the Court in the Hernandez and
subsequent cases. To formulate the question ill these terms would almost be to
compel a negative answer, especially in view of the conclusions reached by the Court
and its several Members today.
Finally, there appears to be no question that the new doctrine that the Government
would have us discover for the first time since the promulgation of the Revised Penal
Code in 1932, would be more onerous for the respondent accused than the simple
application of the Hernandez doctrine that murders which have been committed on the
I submit that the proceedings need not be remanded to the respondent judge for the
purpose of fixing bail since we have construed the indictment herein as charging
simple rebellion, an offense which is bailable. Consequently,habeas corpus is the
proper remedy available to petitioner as an accused who had been charged with
simple rebellion, a bailable offense but who had been denied his right to bail by the
respondent judge in violation of petitioner's constitutional right to bail. In view thereof,
the responsibility of fixing the amount of bail and approval thereof when filed, devolves
upon us, if complete relief is to be accorded to petitioner in the instant proceedings.
It is indubitable that before conviction, admission to bail is a matter of right to the
defendant, accused before the Regional Trial Court of an offense less than capital
(Section 13 Article III, Constitution and Section 3, Rule 114). Petitioner is, before Us,
on a petition for habeas corpus praying, among others, for his provisional release on
bail. Since the offense charged (construed as simple rebellion) admits of bail, it is
incumbent upon us m the exercise of our jurisdiction over the petition for habeas
corpus (Section 5 (1), Article VIII, Constitution; Section 2, Rule 102), to grant petitioner
his right to bail and having admitted him to bail, to fix the amount thereof in such sums
as the court deems reasonable. Thereafter, the rules require that "the proceedings
together with the bond" shall forthwith be certified to the respondent trial court (Section
14, Rule 102).
Accordingly, the cash bond in the amount of P 100,000.00 posted by petitioner for his
provisional release pursuant to our resolution dated March 6, 1990 should now be
deemed and admitted as his bail bond for his provisional release in the case (simple
rebellion) pending before the respondent judge, without necessity of a remand for
further proceedings, conditioned for his (petitioner's) appearance before the trial court
to abide its order or judgment in the said case.
At any rate, the government need only amend the information by a clerical correction,
since an amendment will not alter its substance.
I dissent, however, insofar as the majority orders the remand of the matter of bail to
the lower court. I take it that when we, in our Resolution of March 6, 1990, granted the
petitioner "provisional liberty" upon the filing of a bond of P100,000.00, we granted him
bail. The fact that we gave him "provisional liberty" is in my view, of no moment,
because bail means provisional liberty. It will serve no useful purpose to have the trial
court hear the incident again when we ourselves have been satisfied that the
petitioner is entitled to temporary freedom.
I submit then that it is not for this Court to energize a dead and, at best, fatally decrepit
information by labelling or "baptizing" it differently from what it announces itself to be.
The prosecution must file an entirely new and properinformation, for this entire
exercise to merit the serious consideration of the courts.
13 Id., at 551.
ACCORDINGLY, I vote to GRANT the petitions, QUASH the warrants of arrest, and
ORDER the information for rebellion complexed with murder and multiple frustrated
murder in Criminal Case Nos. 90-10941, RTC of Quezon City, DISMISSED.
Consequently, the petitioners should be ordered permanently released and their bails
cancelled.
Paras, J., concurs.
Footnotes
3 Supra, 521.
4 US v. Santiago, 41 Phil. 793 (1917).
Republic of the Philippines
SUPREME COURT
Manila
EN BANC
Efren H. Mercado for petitioners in G.R. No. 81567 and G. R. No. 83162.
RESOLUTION
PER CURIAM:p
Before the Court are separate motions filed by the petitioners in the above-entitled
petitions, seeking reconsideration of the Court's decision promulgated on 9 July 1990
(the decision, for brevity) which dismissed the petitions, with the following dispositive
part:
WHEREFORE, the petitions are hereby DISMISSED, except that
in G.R. No. 85727 (Espiritu vs. Lim), the bail bond for petitioner's
provisional liberty is hereby ordered reduced from P60,000.00 to
P10,000.00. No costs.
The Court avails of this opportunity to clarify its ruling a begins with the statement that
the decision did not rule as many misunderstood it to do that mere suspicion that
one is Communist Party or New People's Army member is a valid ground for his arrest
without warrant. Moreover, the decision merely applied long existing lawsto the factual
situations obtaining in the several petitions. Among these laws are th outlawing the
Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) similar organizations and penalizing
membership therein be dealt with shortly). It is elementary, in this connection, if these
laws no longer reflect the thinking or sentiment of the people, it is Congress as the
elected representative of the people not the Court that should repeal, change or
modify them.
In their separate motions for reconsideration, petitioners, in sum, maintain:
1. That the assailed decision, in upholding the validity of the
questioned arrests made without warrant, and in relying on the
provisions of the Rules of Court, particularly Section 5 of Rule 113
(Arrest), disregards the fact that such arrests violated the
constitutional rights of the persons arrested;
2. That the doctrine laid down in Garcia vs. Enrile 1 and Ilagan
vs. Enrile 2 should be abandoned;
3. That the decision erred in considering the admissions made by
the persons arrested as to their membership in the Communist
Party of the Philippines/New People's Army, and their ownership
of the unlicensed firearms, ammunitions and subversive
documents found in their possession at the time of arrest,
further disclosed that the wounded man in the said hospital was among the five (5)
male "sparrows" who murdered two (2) Capcom mobile patrols the day before, or on
31 January 1988 at about 12:00 o'clock noon, before a road hump along Macanining
St., Bagong Barrio, Caloocan City; that based on the same information, the wounded
man's name was listed by the hospital management as "Ronnie Javellon," twenty-two
(22) years old of Block 10, Lot 4, South City Homes, Bian, Laguna. 12
Said confidential information received by the arresting officers, to the effect that an
NPA member ("sparrow unit") was being treated for a gunshot wound in the named
hospital, is deemed reasonable and with cause as it was based on actual facts and
supported by circumstances sufficient to engender a belief that an NPA member was
truly in the said hospital. The actual facts supported by circumstances are: first the
day before, or on 31 January 1988, two (2) CAPCOM soldiers were actually killed in
Bagong Bario, Caloocan City by five (5) "sparrows" including Dural; second a
wounded person listed in the hospital records as "Ronnie Javellon" was actually then
being treated in St. Agnes Hospital for a gunshot wound; third as the records of this
case disclosed later, "Ronnie Javellon" and his address entered in the hospital records
were fictitious and the wounded man was in reality Rolando Dural.
In fine, the confidential information received by the arresting officers merited their
immediate attention and action and, in fact, it was found to be true. Even the
petitioners in their motion for reconsideration, 13 believe that the confidential
information of the arresting officers to the effect that Dural was then being treated in
St. Agnes Hospital was actually received from the attending doctor and hospital
management in compliance with the directives of the law, 14 and, therefore, came
from reliable sources.
As to the condition that "probable cause" must also be coupled with acts done in good
faith by the officers who make the arrest, the Court notes that the peace officers wno
arrested Dural are deemed to have conducted the same in good faith, considering that
law enforcers are presumed to regularly perform their official duties. The records show
that the arresting officers did not appear to have been ill-motivated in arresting
Dural. 15 It is therefore clear that the arrest, without warrant, of Dural was made in
compliance with the requirements of paragraphs (a) and (b) of Section 5, Rule 113.
Parenthetically, it should be mentioned here that a few day after Dural's arrest, without
warrant, an information charging double murder with assault against agents of
persons in authority was filed against Dural in the Regional Trial Court of Caloocan
City (Criminal Case No. C-30112). He was thus promptly placed under judicial custody
(as distinguished fro custody of the arresting officers). On 31 August 1988, he wa
convicted of the crime charged and sentenced to reclusion perpetua. The judgment of
conviction is now on appeal before this Court in G.R. No. 84921.
As to Amelia Roque and Wilfredo Buenaobra (G.R. Nos. 84581-82), Domingo
Anonuevo and Ramon Casiple(G.R. Nos. 84583-84) and Vicky Ocaya (G.R. No.
83162), their arrests, without warrant, are also justified. They were searched pursuant
to search warrants issued by a court of law and were found wit unlicensed firearms,
explosives and/or ammunition in their persons. They were, therefore, caught
in flagrante delicto which justified their outright arrests without warrant, under Sec
5(a), Rule 113, Rules of Court. Parenthetically, it should be mentioned here that a few
davs after their arrests without warrant, informations were filed in court against said
petitioners, thereby placing them within judicial custody and disposition. Furthermore,
Buenaobra mooted his own petition fo habeas corpus by announcing to this Court
during the hearing of these petitions that he had chosen to remain in detention in the
custody of the authorities.
More specifically, the antecedent facts in the "in flagrante" cases are:
1. On 27 June 1988, the military agents received information
imparted by a former NPA about the operations of the CPP and
NPA in Metro Manila and that a certain house occupied by one
Renato Constantine, located in the Villaluz Compound, Molave
St., Marikina Heights, Marikina, Metro Manila was being used as
their safehouse; that in view of this information, the said house
was placed under military surveillance and on 12 August
1988, pursuant to a search warrant duly issued by court, a search
of the house was conducted; that when Renato Constantine was
then confronted he could not produce any permit to possess the
firearms, ammunitions, radio and other communications
equipment, and he admitted that he was a ranking member of the
CPP. 16
2. In the case of Wilfredo Buenaobra, he arrived at the house of
Renato Constantino in the evening of 12 August 1988, and
admitted that he was an NPA courier and he had with him letters
to Renato Constantine and other members of the rebel group.
3. On the other hand, the arrest of Amelia Roque was a
consequence of the arrest of Buenaobra who had in his
possession papers leading to the whereabouts of Roque; 17 that,
at the time of her arrest, the military agents found subversive
documents and live ammunitions, and she admitted then that the
documents belonged to her. 18
4. As regards Domingo Anonuevo and Ramon Casiple they were
arrested without warrant on 13 August 1988, when they arrived at
the said house of Renato Constantine in the evening of said date;
that when the agents frisked them, subversive documents, and
loaded guns were found in the latter's possession but failing to
show a permit to possess them. 19
5. With regard to Vicky Ocaya, she was arrested, without warrant
when she arrived (on 12 May 1988) at the premises ofthe house
of one Benito Tiamzon who was believed to be the head of the
CPP/NPA, and whose house was subject of a search warrant
duly issued by the court. At the time of her arrest without warrant
the agents of the PC-Intelligence and Investigation found
ammunitions and subversive documents in the car of Ocaya. 20
It is to be noted in the above cases (Roque, Buenaobra, Anonuevo, Casiple and
Ocaya) that the reason which compelled the military agents to make the arrests
without warrant was the information given to the military authorities that two (2)
safehouses (one occupied by Renato Constantine and the other by Benito Tiamzon)
were being used by the CPP/NPA for their operations, with information as to their
exact location and the names of Renato Constantine and Benito Tiamzon as residents
or occupants thereof.
And at the time of the actual arrests, the following circumstances surrounded said
arrests (of Roque, Buenaobra, Anonuevo and Casiple), which confirmed the belief of
the military agents that the information they had received was true and the persons to
be arrested were probably guilty of the commission of certain crimes: first: search
warrant was duly issued to effect the search of the Constantine safehouse; second:
found in the safehouse was a person named Renato Constantine, who admitted that
he was a ranking member of the CPP, and found in his possession were unlicensed
firearms and communications equipment; third: at the time of their arrests, in their
possession were unlicensed firearms, ammunitions and/or subversive documents, and
they admitted ownership thereof as well as their membership in the CPP/NPA. And
then, shortly after their arrests, they were positively identified by their former
comrades in the organization as CPP/NPA members. In view of these circumstances,
the corresponding informations were filed in court against said arrested persons. The
records also show that, as in the case of Dural, the arrests without warrant made by
the military agents in the Constantino safehouse and later in the Amelia Roque house,
do not appear to have been ill-motivated or irregularly performed.
With all these facts and circumstances existing before, during and after the arrest of
the afore-named persons (Dural, Buenaobra, Roque, Anonuevo, Casiple and Ocaya),
no prudent an can say that it would have been better for the military agents not to
have acted at all and made any arrest. That would have been an unpardonable
neglect of official duty and a cause for disciplinary action against the peace officers
involved.
For, one of the duties of law enforcers is to arrest lawbreakers in order to place them
in the hands of executive and judicial authorities upon whom devolves the duty to
investigate the acts constituting the alleged violation of law and to prosecute and
secure the punishment therefor. 21 An arrest is therefore in the nature of an
administrative measure. The power to arrest without warrant is without limitation as
long as the requirements of Section 5, Rule 113 are met. This rule is founded on an
overwhelming public interest in peace and order in our communities.
In ascertaining whether the arrest without warrant is conducted in accordance with the
conditions set forth in Section 5, Rule 113, this Court determines not whether the
persons arrested are indeed guilty of committing the crime for which they were
arrested. 22 Not evidence of guilt, but "probable cause" is the reason that can validly
compel the peace officers, in the performance of their duties and in the interest of
public order, to conduct an arrest without warrant. 23
The courts should not expect of law-enforcers more than what the law requires of
them. Under the conditions set forth in Section 5, Rule 113, particularly paragraph (b)
thereof, even if the arrested persons are later found to be innocent and acquitted, the
arresting officers are not liable. 24 But if they do not strictly comply with the said
conditions, the arresting officers can be held liable for the crime of arbitrary
detention, 25 for damages under Article 32 of the Civil Code 26 and/or for other
administrative sanctions.
In G.R. No. 85727, Espiritu, on 23 November 1988, was arrested without warrant, on
the basis of the attestation of certain witnesses: that about 5:00 o'clock in the
afternoon of 22 November 1988, at the corner of Magsaysay Boulevard and Velencia
St., Sta. Mesa, Manila, Espiritu spoke at a gathering of drivers and sympathizers,
where he said, among other things:
Bukas tuloy ang welga natin . . . hanggang sa
magkagulona. 27 (Emphasis supplied)
and that the police authorities were present during the press conference held at the
National Press Club (NPC) on 22 November 1988 where Espiritu called for a
nationwide strike (of jeepney and bus drivers) on 23 November 1988. 28 Espiritu was
arrested without warrant, not for subversion or any "continuing offense," but for
uttering the above-quoted language which, in the perception of the arresting officers,
was inciting to sedition.
Many persons may differ as to the validity of such perception and regard the language
as falling within free speech guaranteed by the Constitution. But, then, Espiritu had
not lost the right to insist, during the pre-trial or trial on the merits, that he was just
exercising his right to free speech regardless of the charged atmosphere in which it
was uttered. But, the authority of the peace officers to make the arrest, without
warrant, at the time the words were uttered, or soon thereafter, is still another thing. In
the balancing of authority and freedom, which obviously becomes difficult at times, the
Court has, in this case, tilted the scale in favor of authority but only for purposes of the
arrest (not conviction). Let it be noted that the Court has ordered the bail for Espiritu's
release to be reduced from P60,000.00 to P10,000.00.
Let it also be noted that supervening events have made the Espiritu case moot and
academic. For Espiritu had before arraignment asked the court a quo for reinvestigation, the peace officers did not appear. Because of this development, the
defense asked the court a quo at the resumption of the hearings to dismiss the case.
Case against Espiritu (Criminal Case No. 88-68385) has been provisionally dismissed
and his bail bond cancelled.
In G.R. No. 86332 (Nazareno), the records show that in the morning of 14 December
1988, Romulo Bunye II was killed by a group of men in Alabang, Muntinlupa, Metro
Manila; that at about 5:00 o'clock in the morning of 28 December 1988, Ramil Regala,
one of the suspects in the said killing, was arrested and he pointed to Narciso
Nazareno as one of his companions during the killing of Bunye II; that at 7:20 of the
same morning (28 December 1988), the police agents arrested Nazareno, without
warrant, for investigation. 29
Although the killing of Bunye II occurred on 14 December 1988, while Nazareno's
arrest without warrant was made only on 28 December 1988, or 14 days later, the
arrest fans under Section 5(b) of Rule 113, since it was only on 28 December 1988
that the police authorities came to know that Nazareno was probably one of those
guilty in the killing of Bunye II and the arrest had to be made promptly, even without
warrant, (after the police were alerted) and despite the lapse of fourteen (14) days to
prevent possible flight.
As shown in the decision under consideration, this Court, in upholding the arrest
without warrant of Nazareno noted several facts and events surrounding his arrest
and detention, as follows:
. . . on 3 January 1989 (or six (6) days after his arrest without
warrant), an information charging Narciso Nazareno, Ramil
Regala and two (2) others, with the killing of Romulo Bunye II was
filed wit the Regional Trial Court of Makati, Metro Manila. The
case is dock eted therein as Criminal Case No. 731.
On 7 January 1989, Narciso Nazareno filed a motion to post bail
but the motion was denied by the trial court in an order dated 10
January 1989, even as the motion to post bail, earlier filed by his
co-accused, Manuel Laureaga, was granted by the same trial
court.
courts are enjoined to do the same the legality of the arrest without warrant so that
if the conditions under Sec. 5 of Rule 113, Rules of Court, as elucidated in this
Resolution, are not met, then the detainee shall forthwith be ordered released; but if
such conditions are met, then the detainee shall not be made to languish in his
detention but must be promptly tried to the end that he may be either acquitted or
convicted, with the least delay, as warranted by the evidence.
A Final Word
This Court reiterates that shortly after the arrests of Espiritu and Nazareno, the
corresponding informations against them were filed in court. The arrests of Espiritu
and Nazareno were based on probable cause and supported by factual
circumstances. They complied with conditions set forth in Section 5(b) of Rule 113.
They were not arbitrary or whimsical arrests.
Parenthetically, it should be here stated that Nazareno has since been convicted by
the court a quo for murder and sentenced to reclusion perpetua. He has appealed the
judgment of conviction to the Court of Appeals where it is pending as of this date ( CAG.R. No. still undocketed).
Petitioners contend that the decision of 9 July 1990 ignored the contitution requisiteds
for admissibility of an extrajudicial admission.
In the case of Buenaobra (G.R. Nos. 84581-82), he admitted 30 that he was an NPA
courier. On the other hand, in the case ofAmelia Roque, she admitted 31 that the
unlicensed firearms, ammunition and subversive documents found in her possession
during her arrest, belonged to her.
The Court, it is true, took into account the admissions of the arrested persons of their
membership in the CPP/NPA, as well as their ownership of the unlicensed firearms,
ammunitions and documents in their possession. But again, these admissions, as
revealed by the records, strengthen the Court's perception that truly the grounds upon
which the arresting officers based their arrests without warrant, are supported by
probable cause, i.e. that the persons arrested were probably guilty of the commission
of certain offenses, in compliance with Section 5, Rule 113 of the Rules of Court. To
note these admissions, on the other hand, is not to rule that the persons arrested are
already guilty of the offenses upon which their warrantless arrests were predicated.
The task of determining the guilt or innocence of persons arrested without warrant is
not proper in a petition for habeas corpus. It pertains to the trial of the case on the
merits.
As to the argument that the doctrines in Garcia vs. Enrile, and Ilagan vs. Enrile should
be abandoned, this Court finds no compelling reason at this time to disturb the same,
particularly ln the light of prevailing conditions where national security and liability are
still directly challenged perhaps with greater vigor from the communist rebels. What is
important is that everv arrest without warrant be tested as to its legality via habeas
corpus proceeding. This Court. will promptly look into and all other appropriate
November 12, 1988. The second allegedly seditious remark aforequoted was made at
around 5:00 o'clock in the same afternoon (Decision, pp. 23-24). Under these
circumstances, the law enforcement agents had time, short though it might seem, to
secure a warrant for his arrest. Espiritu's apprehension may not therefore be
considered as covered by Section 5(b) of Rule 113 which allows warrantless arrests
"when an offense has in fact just been committed."
The same observation applies with greater force in the case of Nazareno who was
arrested 14 days after the commission of the crime imputed to him.
Secondly, warrantless arrests may not be allowed if the arresting officer are not sure
what particular provision of law had beeri violated by the person arrested. True it is
that law en.orcement agents and even prosecutors are not all adept at the However,
errneous perception, not to mention ineptitude among their ranks, especially if it would
result in the violation of any right of a person, may not be tolerated. That the arrested
person has the "right to insist during the pre-trial or trial on the merits" (Resolution., p.
18) that he was exercising a right which the arresting officer considered as contrary to
law, is beside the point. No person should be subjected to the ordeal of a trial just
because the law enforcers wrongly perceived his action.
Thirdly, inciting to sedition is not a continuous crime for which the offender may be
arrested without a warrant duly issued by the proper authority. By its nature, a single
act of urging others to commit any of the acts enumerated in Article 142 of the
Revised Penal Code may suffice to hold anyone liable for inciting to sedition. While
the crime is aimed at anarchy and radicalism and presents largely a question of policy
(Espuelas vs. People, 90 Phil, 524 [1951]), it should be remembered that any of the
prohibited acts in Article 142 may infringe upon the fundamental freedoms of speech
and expression. There arises, therefore, the necessity of balancing interests; those of
the State as against those of its individual citizen. Here lies the urgency of judicial
intervention before an arrest is made. Added to this is the subjectivity of the
determination of what may incite other people to sedition. Hence, while the police
should act swiftly when a seditious statement has been uttered in view of the jeopardy
it may cause the government, speedy action should consist not in warrantless arrests
but in securing warrants for such arrests.
On the legality of warrantless arrests of violators of the Anti-Subversion Law, it should
be underscored that anyone who undertakes such arrest must see to it that the
alleged violator is knowing member of a subversive organization as distinguished from
a nominal one (People vs. Ferrer, L-32613-14, December 27, 1972, 48 SCRA 382).
Thus, a subversive may be arrested even if has not committed overt act of
overthrowing the government such as bombing of government offices trie
assassination of government officials provided there is probable cause to believe that
he is in the roll of members of a subversive organization. It devolves upon the
accused to prove membership by force or ciorcion. Certainly, one may not be in such
a roll without undergoing the concious act of enlistment.
It bears repeating theat warrantless arrests are governed by law and subject to
stringent application. Section 5, Rule 113 of the Rules on Criminal Procedure now
requires that an offense "has in fact just been committed. "connotes immediacy in
point of time and excludes cases under the old rule where an offense 'has in fact been
committed' no how long ago. Similarly, the arrestor must have 'personal knowledge of
the facts indicating that the [arrestee] has committed it' (instead of just 'reasonable
ground believe that the [arrestee] has committed it' under the old rule)." (Dissenting
opinion in Ilagan vs. Enrile, G.R. No. 70748, October 21, 1985, 139 SCRA 349, 408).
I deem it aptherein to recall other Court rulings provide guidelines in effecting arrests
without warrants. In People vs. Burgos (G.R. No. 68955, September 4, 1986,144
SCRA 1), the Court considered as illegal the warrantless arrest of a
subversive not based on the arresting officer's personal knowledge such subversion
and held that any rule on arrests witho warrants must be strictly construed. We
categorically state therein that warrantless arrests should "clearly fall within the
situations when securing a warrant be absurd or is manifestly unnecessary was
provided by the Rules" (144 SCRA at 14). Moreover. "it is not enough that there is
reasonable ground to believe that the person to be arrested has committed a crime. A
crime must in fact or actually (has just) been committed first. That crime has actually
been committed is an essential precondition. It is not enough to suspect that a crime
may have been committed. The fact of the commission of the offense must be
undisputed. The test of reasonable ground applies only to the identity of the
perpetrator. (Supra, at p. 15).
Earlier, in Morales, Jr. vs. Enrile (G.R. No. 61016, April 26, 1983, 121 SCRA 538), the
Court laid out the procedure to be observed the moment a person is arrested:
At the time a person is arrested, it shall be the duty of the
arresting officer to imform him of the reason for the arrest and he
must be shown the warrant of arrest, if any. He shall be informed
of his constitutional rights to remain silent and to counsel, and that
any statement he might make could be used against him. The
person shall have the right to communicate with his lawyer, a
relative, or anyone he chooses by the most expedient means
by telephone if possible or by letter or messenger. It shall be
the responsibility of the arresting officer to see to it that this is
accomplished. No custodial investigation shall be conducted
unless it be in the presence of counsel engaged by the person
arressted, by any person on his behalf, or appointed by the court
upon petition on his behalf, or appointed the court upon the
petition either of the detainee himself or by anyone on his behalf.
The right to counsel may be waived but the waiver shall not be
valid unless made with the assistance of counsel. Any statement
obtained in violation of the procedure herein laid down, whether
exculpatory or inculpatory, in whole or in part shall be
inadmissible evidence. (121 SCRA at 554).
These judicial pronouncements must be observed by everyone concerned: the military
and civilian components of the government tasked with law enforcement as well as
the ordinary citizen who faces a situation wherein civic duty demands his intervention
to preserve peace in the community.
I am not unmindful of the fact that abuses occur in arrests especially of offenders of
crimes with a political or ideological element. Such abuses are more often than not,
triggered by the difficulty in finding evidence that could stand judicial scrutiny to
pinpoint a subversive, police officers usually have to make long persistent
surveillance. However, for the orderly administration of government and the
maintenance of peace and order in the country, good faith should be reposed on the
officials implementing the law. After all, we are not wanting in laws to hold any
offending peace officer liable both administratively and criminally for abuses in the
performance of their duties. Victims of abuses should resort to legal remedies to
redress their grievances.
If existing laws are inadequate, the policy-determining branches of the government
may be exhorted peacefully by the citizenry to effect positive changes. This Court,
mandated b the Constitution to uphold the law, can only go as far as inter pruting
existing laws and the spirit behind them. Otherwise, we hail be entering the dangerous
ground of judicial legislation.
GUTIERREZ, JR., J., concurring and dissenting:
The philosophy adopted in our Constitution is that liberty is an essential condition for
order, It is disturbing whenever the Court leans in the direction of order instead of
liberty in har cases coming before us.
People all over the world are fast accepting the theory that only as a society
encourages freedom and permits dissent can it have lasting security and real
progress, the theory that enhancing order through constraints on freedom is deceptive
because restrictions on liberty corrode the very values Govenment pretends to
promote. I believe we should move with the people of the world who are fast liberating
themselves.
I, therefore, vote for the strict application of Section 5 (a) and (b) of Rule 113 on
arrests without warrant, to wit:
Sec. 5. Arrest without warrant; when lawful. A peace officer or
a private person may, without a warrant, arrest a person:
(a) When, in his presence, the person to be arrested has
committed, is actually committing, or is attempting to commit an
offense;
(b) When an offense has in fact just been committed, and he has
personal knowledge of facts indicating that the person to be
arrested has committed it.
xxx xxx xxx
Only in the cases found in the Rule should we allow arrests without warrants. In case
of doubt, the tendency should be to declare the warrantless arrest illegal.
Insofar as G.R. Nos, 84581-82, G.R. Nos. 84583-84 and G.R. No. 83162 involving
Amelia Roque, Wilfredo Buenaobra, Domingo Anonuevo, Ramon Casiple, and Vicky
Ocaya are concerned, the petitioners were arrested after having been apprehended
while in possession of illegal firearms and ammunitions. They were actually
committing a crime when arrested. I concur in the denial of their motions for
reconsideration.
I vote to grant the motion for reconsideration in G.R. No. 85727 where Deogracias
Espiritu was arrested while urging jeepnev and bus drivers to join a strike of transport
workers on the ground that that was inciting to sedition.
This impresses me as Court validation of a clear infringement of an individual's
freedom of speech. "Inciting to sedition" is a term over which the most learned writers
and jurists will differ when applied to actual cases. I doubt if there are more than a
handful of policemen in the whole country who would know the full dimensions of the
fine distinctions which separate the nation's interest in the liberty to fully anfd freely
discuss matters of national importance on one hand and the application of the clear
and present danger rule as the test when claims of national security and public safety
are asserted, on the other. In fact, the percentage of knowledgeability would go down
further if we consider that "inciting to sedition" requires the ability to define, among
other (1) what kinds of speeches or writings fall lander the term "inciting" (2) the
meaning of rising publicly and tumultously; (3,) when does a certain effort amount to
force, intimidation. or illegal method; (4) what constitute the five objects or ends of
sedition; and (5) what is a scurrilous libel against the Philippines. If we allow public
speakers to be picked up simply because what they say is irritating or obnoxious to
the ears of a peace officer or critical of government policy and action, we will
undermine all pronouncements of this Court on the need to protect that matrix of all
freedoms, which is freedom of expression. At the very least, a warrant of arrest after a
preliminary examination by a Judge is essential in this type of offense.
Insofar as G.R. No. 81567 is concemed, I join the other dissenting Justices in their
observations regarding "continuing oftenses." To base warrantless arrests on the
doctrine of continuing offense is to give a license for the illegal detention of persons on
pure suspicion. Rebellion, insurrection, or sedition are political offenses where the line
between overt acts and simple advocacy or adherence to a belief is extremely thin. If
a court has convicted an accused of rebellion and he is found roaming around, he
may be arrested. But until a person is proved guilty, I fail to see how anybody can
jump to a personal conclusion that the suspect is indeed a rebel and must be picked
up on sight whenever seen. The grant of authority in the majority opinion is too broad.
If warrantless searches are to be validated, it should be Congress and not this Court
which should draw strict and narrow standards. Otherwise, the non-rebels who are
critical, noisy, or obnoxious will be indiscriminately lumped up with those actually
taking up arms against the Government.
The belief of law enforcement authorities, no matter how well grounded on past
events, that the petitioner would probably shoot other policemen whom he may meet
does not validate warrantless arrests. I cannot understand why the authorities
preferred to bide their time, await the petitioner's surfacing from underground, and
pounce on him with no legal authority instead of securing warrants of arrest for his
apprehension. The subsequent conviction of a person arrested illegally does not the
warrantless arrest.
In G.R. No. 86332, Romulo Bunye was killed on December 14, 1988. The information
that Narciso Nazareno was one of the killers came to the attention of peace officers
only on December 28, 1988 or fourteen (14) days later. To say that the offense "has in
fact just been committed" even if 14 days have lapsed is to stretch Rule 11 3 on
warrantless arrests into ridiculous limits. A warrant of arrest is essential in this case. I
vote to grant the motion for reconsideration.
The subsequent conviction of a person arrested illegally does not reach back into the
past and render legal what was illegal. The violation of the constitutional right against
illegal seizures is not cured by the fact that the arrested person is indeed guilty of the
offense for which he was seized. A government of laws must abide by its own
Constitution.
CONSIDERING THE FOREGOING, I VOTE TO:
(1) DENY the motions for reconsideration in G.R. Nos. 84581-82; G.R. No. 84583-84;
and G.R. No. 83162;
(2) GRANT the motion for reconsideration in G.R. No. 85727;
thus suggesting that the validity of a warrantless arrest is reckoned not from the time
of the commission of an offense but from the time of the Identification of the suspect.
Section 5 of Rule 113 says that a peace officer may arrest a person without a warrant
if the latter "has committed, is actually committing, or is attempting to commit an
offense" or when an offense "has in fact just been committed." The requirement of
immediacy is obvious from the word "just," which, according to Webster, means "a
very short time ago." The arrest must be made almost immediately or soon after these
acts, not at any time after the suspicion of the arresting officer begins, no matter how
long ago the offense was committed.
I am also uneasy over the following observations in the present resolution which I
hope will not be the start of another dangerous doctrine:
The Court, it is true, took into account the admissions of the
arrested persons of their membership in the CPP/NPA, as well as
their ownership of the unlicensed firearms, ammunitions and
documents in their possession. But again, these admissions, as
revealed by the records, strengthen the Court's perception that
truly the grounds upon wmch the arresting officers based their
arrests without warrant, are supported by probable cause, i.e.,
that the persons arrested were probably guilty of the commission
of certain offenses, in compliance with Section 5, Rule 113 of the
Rules of Court.
I can only repeat my own misgivings when I dissented in the recent case of People
vs. Malmstedt, G.R. No. 91107, June 19, 1991, where I noted: "The conclusion that
there was probable cause may have been influenced by the subsequent discovery
that the accused was carrying a prohibited drug. This is supposed to justify the
soldier's suspicion. In other words, it was the fact of illegal possession that
retroactively established the probable cause that validated the illegal search and
seizure. It was the fruit of the poisonous tree that washed clean the tree itself."
I submit that the affirmation by this Court of the Garcia-Padilla decision to justify the
illegal arrests made in the cases before us is a step back to that shameful past when
individual rights were wantonly and systematically violated by the Marcos dictatorship.
It seems some of us have short memories of that repressive regime, but I for one am
not one to forget so soon. As the ultimate defender of the Constitution, this Court
should not gloss over the abuses of those who, out of mistaken zeal, would violate
individual liberty in the dubious name of national security. Whatever their ideology and
even if it be hostile to ours, the petitioners are entitled to the protection of the Bill of
Rights, no more and no less than any other person in this country. That is what
democracy is all about.
FELICIANO, J., concurring and dissenting:
I concur in the result reached by the majority in the Resolution disposing of the Motion
for Reconsideration.
At the same time, however, I feel compelled to dissent from certain statements made
by the majority principally concerning the applicability of the "continuing crimes"
doctrine to the problem of arrests without warrants. It seems clear that these
statements are really obiter dicta, since they are quite unnecessary for sustaining the
actual results reached in the majority Resolution. This was summarily pointed out in
my very brief statement concurring in the result reached in the original Decision of the
Court dated 9 July 1990. The subsequent developments in several of the cases here
consolidated, which are carefully detailed in the majority Resolution, make this even
clearer. Nonetheless, the majority Resolution has taken the time and trouble expressly
to reiterate the "continuing crimes" doctrine as applicable in respect of warrantless
arrests. Although the above statements are obiter, they have been made and, I
believe, need to be addressed to some extent and the inter-relation of the "continuing
crimes" doctrine with constitutional rights explored.
1. We start at the beginning, that is, the constitutional guarantee against unreasonable
seizures of persons. Article III Section 2 of the Constitution reads:
Sec. 2. The right of the people to be secure in their persons,
houses, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and
seizures of whatever nature and for any purpose shall be
inviolable, and no search warrant or warrant of arrest shall issue
except upon probable cause to be determined personally by the
judge after examination under oath or affirmation of the
complainant and the witnesses he may produce, and particularly
describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to
be seized. (Emphais supplied)
Under the above provision, arrests, i.e., the constraint and seizure of the persons of
individual members of society, must, as a general rule, be preceded by the securing of
a warrant of arrest, the rendition of which complies with the constitutional procedure
specified in Article III Section 2. Arrests made without a warrant issued by a judge after
complying with the constitutional procedure, are prima facie unreasonable seizures of
persons within the meaning of Article III Section 2.
2. There are, however, certain well-recognized exceptions to the norm that warrantless
arrests are unreasonable seizures of persons. Those exceptions are, in our day,
essentially found in Section 5(a) and (b) of Rule 113 of the Rules of Court. Section
5(a) and (b) mark out the situations where an officer of the law, or a private person for
that matter, may lawfully arrest a person without previously securing a warrant of
arrest. The full text of Section 5, Rule 113 follows:
Sec. 5. Arrest without warrant, when lawful. A peace officer or
a private person may, without a warrant, arrest a person:
(a) When, in his presence, the person to be arrested has
committed, is actually committing, or is attempting to commit an
offense;
(b) When an offense has in fact just been committed, and he has
personal knowledge of facts indicating that the person to be
arrested has committed it; and
(c) When the person to be arrested is a prisoner who has
escaped from a penal establishment or place where he is serving
final judgment or temporarily confined while his case is pending,
or has escaped while being transferred from one confinement to
another.
In cases falling under paragraphs (a) and (b) hereof, the person
arrested without a warrant shall be forthwith delivered to the
nearest police station or jail, and he shall be proceeded against in
accordance with Rule 112, Section 7.
3. Before examining the scope and implications of Section 5(a) and (b), it is important
to recall that judicial interpretation and application of Section 5(a) and (b) must take
those provision for what they are: they areexceptions to a vital constitutional norm
enshrined in the Bill of Rights. Exceptions to such a norm must be strictly construed so
as not to render futile and meaningless the constitutional rule requiring warrants of
arrests before the persons of individuals may be lawfully constrained and seized. The
ordinary rule generally applicable to statutory provisions is that exceptions to such
provisions must not be stretched beyond what the language in which they are cast
fairly warrants, and all doubts should be resolved in favor of the general provision,
rather than the exception. 1 This rule must apply with special exigency and cogency
where we deal, not with an ordinary statutory provision, but with a constitutional
guarantee. 2 Exceptions to such a guarantee must be read with especial care and
sensitivity and kept within the limits of their language so to keep vital and significant
the general constitutional norms warrantless arrests. In Alvarez vs. Court of First
Instance, 3 this Court, stressing that:
II. As the protection of the citizen and the maintenance of his
constitutional rights is one of the highest duties and privileges of
the court. these constitutional guaranties should be given a liberal
construction or a strict construction in favor of the individual, to
prevent stealthy encroachment upon, or gradual depreciation of,
the rights secured by them (State vs. Custer County, 198 Pac.,
362; State vs. McDaniel, 231 Pac., 965; 237 Pac., 373). Since the
proceeding is a drastic one, it is the general rule that statutes
authorizing searches and seizures or search warrants must be
strictly construed (Rose vs. St. Clair, 28 Fed. [2d], 189; Leonard
vs. U.S., 6 Fed. [2d], 353; Perry vs. U.S., 14 Fed. [2d], 88; Cofer
vs. State, 118 So., 613. (emphasis supplied)
held that:
. . . All illegal searches and seizures are unreasonable whith
lawful ones are reasonable. 4
In People vs. Burgos, 5 this Court reiterated the above rule in the following
terms:
There is no such personal knowledge in this case. Whatever
knowledge was possessed by the arresting officers, it came in its
entirety from the information furnished by Cesar Masamlok. The
location of the firearm was given by the appellant's wife.
At the time of the appellant's arrest, he was not in actual
possession of any firearm or subversive document. Neither was
he commit ting any act which could be described as
subversive. He was, in fact plowing his field at the time of the
arrest.
6. The use of the words "has in fact just been committed" underscores the
requirement that the time interval between the actual commission of the crime and the
arrival of the arresting officer must be brief indeed. In the first place, the word "just"
was fairly recently inserted in Section 5(b) by the 1985 Rules on Criminal Procedures,
no doubt in order to underscore the point here being made. In the second place, a
latitudinarian view of the phrase "has in fact just been committed" would obviously
render pointless the requirement in Section 5(a) that the crime must have been
committed "[in] the presence" of the arresting officer. In G.R. No. 86332, the
warrantless arrest of Alfredo Nazareno 14-days after the occurrence of the killing with
which he was charged along with other persons, cannot by any standard be justified
under Section 5(b). In G.R. No. 81567, Dural was arrested without warrant while being
treated in a hospital the day after the shooting of the policemen in which he was
suspected to have been a participant. While 1-day may be substantially different from
14-days, still it must be pointed out that at the time Dural was arrested in the hospital,
the killing of the two (2) policemen in Caloocan City far away from the St. Agnes
Hospital in Quezon City could not reasonably be said to have been just committed.
There was no showing, nor did the Court require it, that the arresting officers had been
in "hot pursuit" of Dural beginning at the scene of the killing and ending the next day in
the hospital.
7. It is worth noting that the requisite of "personal knowledge" on the part of the
arresting officer who is determining "probable cause" right at the scene of the crime, is
in a sense more exacting than the standard imposed by the Constitution upon the
judge who, in the seclusion of his chambers, ascertains "probable cause" by
examining the evidence submitted before him. The arresting officer must himself have
"personal knowledge"; the magistrate may rely upon the personal knowledge of the
witnesses examined by or for him in issuing a warrant of arrest. In the present
Resolution, the majority begins with noting the requirement of "personal knowledge" in
Section 5(b), but winds up in the next page with a very diluted standard of "reasonable
belief and "good faith" on the part of the arresting officers. The stricter standard is
properly applicable to the officers seizing a person without a warrant of arrest, for they
are acting in derogation of a constitutional right. That the person unlawfully arrested
without a warrant may later turn out to be guilty of the offense he was suspected of in
the first place is, course, quite beside the point. Even a person secretly guilty some
earlier crime is constitutionally entitled to be secure from warrantless arrest, unless he
has in fact committed physically observable criminal acts in the presence of the
arresting officer or hadjust committed such acts when the arresting officer burst upon
the scene.
8. Examination of the utilization in the majotity Resolution of the doctrine of "continuing
crimes," shows that doctrine is here being used as a substitute for the requirement
under Section 5(a) that the offense "has in fact just been presence of the arresting
officer arrived, but rather because the person to be arrested is suspected of having
committed a crime in the future. The pertinent portion of the majority Resolution reads:
. . . Dural did not cease to be, or because less of a subversive,
FOR PURPOSE OF ARREST, simply because he was, at the
time of arrest, confined in the St. Agnes Hospital. . . . That Dural
had shot the two (2) policemen in Caloocan City as part of his
mission as a "sparrow" (NPA member) did not end there and then.
Dural, given another opportunity, would have shot or would shoot
other policemen anywhere as agents or representatives of
organized government. It is in this sense that subversion like
rebelion (or insurrection) is perceived here as a continuing
offense. Unlike other so-called "common" offenses, i.e., adultery,
murder, arson, etc., which generally end upon their
commission,subversion and rebellion are anchored on an
the presence of the arresting officer. The capacity for mischief of such a utilization of
the "continuing crimes" doctrine, is infinitely increased where the crime charged does
not consist of unambiguous criminal acts with a definite beginning and end in time and
space (such as the killing or wounding of a person or kidnapping and illegal dentention
or arson) but rather of such problematic offenses as membership in or affiliation with
or becoming a member of, a subversive association or organization. For in such
cases, the overt constitutive acts may be morally neutral in themselves, and the
unlawfulness of the acts a function of the aims or objectives of the organization
involved. Note, for instance, the following acts which constitute prima facie evidence
of "membership in any subversive association:" 13
a) Allowing himself to be listed as a member in any book or any of
the lists, records, correspondence, or any other document of the
organization;
b) Subjecting himself to the discipline of such association or
organization in any form whatsoever;
c) Giving financial contribution to such association or organization
in dues, assessments, loans or in any other forms;
While I have heretofore concurred in the ponencia in the above-entitled cases and I
reiterate such concurrence, I wish to unburden myself of some reservations on the
rationale adopted in G.R. No. 86332.
It is posited in this resolution that "(a)lthough the killing of Bunye II occurred on 14
December 1988, while Nazareno's arrest without warrant was made only on 28
December 1988, or 14 days later, the arrest falls under Section 5(b) of Rule 113, since
it was only on 28 December 1988 that the police authorities came to know that
Nazareno was probably one of those guilty in the killing of Bunye II."
I am afraid that there has been a misapplication of Section 5(b) of Rule 113 which,
while authorizing a peace officer or a private person to effect a warrantless arrest,
specifically conditions that grant of authority upon the situation "(w)hen an offense has
in fact just been committed, and he has personal knowledge of facts indicating that the
person to be arrested has committed it."
It is significant that when the corresponding provisions of the 1964 Rules of Court
were amended in the 1985 Rules of Criminal Procedure, the particular revision of
paragraph (b) of the aforesaid section consisted in imposing the requirements that the
person making the arrest has personal knowledge of the facts indicating that the
arrestee is responsible for an offense which has just been committed.
Now, according to the resolution, "the records show that in the morning of 14
December 1988, Romulo Bunye II was killed by a group of men in Alabang,
Muntinlupa, Metro Manila; that at about 5 o'clock in the morning of 28 December
1988, Ramil Regala, one of the suspects in the said killing, was arrested and he
pointed to Narciso Nazareno as one of his companions during the killing of Bunye II;
that at 7:20 of the same morning (28 December 1988), the police agents arrested
Nazareno, without warrant, for investigation."
Since, clearly, the arresting police agents merely acted upon the information imparted
by one of the suspects, Ramil Regala, the resolution has emasculated the
requirement in Section 5(b) that the person making the arrest must have had personal
knowledge of factual indications regarding the complicity or liability of the arrestee for
the crime. Yet, that amendment requiring such personal knowledge must have been
designed to obviate the practice in the past of warrantless arrests being effected on
the basis of or supposed reliance upon information obtained from third persons who
merely professed such knowledge or, worse, concocted such reports for variant
reasons not necessarily founded on truth.
Further, and obviously as an added deterrent to the possibility that such arrest without
a warrant may result from imputations based on dubious motives, it is now required
that the crime must have just been committed. The recency contemplated here, in
relation to the making of the warrantless arrest, is the time when the crime was in fact
committed, and not the time when the crime was in fact committed, and not the time
when the person making the arrest learned or was informed of such commission.
Otherwise, at the risk of resorting to reductio ad absurdum, such warrantless arrests
could be validly made even for a crime committed, say, more than a year ago but of
which the arresting officer received information only today.
The brevity in the interval of time between the commission of the crime and the arrest,
as now required by Section 5(b), must have been dictated by the consideration,
among others, that by reason of such recency of the criminal occurrence, the
probability of the arresting officer acquiring personal and/or reliable knowledge of such
fact and the identity of the offender is necessarily enhanced, if not assured. The longer
the interval, the more attenuated are the chances of his obtaining such verifiable
knowledge. In the case under consideration, the obtention of information of a crime
committed fourteen (14) days earlier necessarily undermines the capacity of the
arresting officer to ascertain the reliability of the information he is acting upon and to
acquire personal knowledge thereof after such verification.
It may be granted, as an ad hoc proposition, that the arrest of Nazareno was based on
probable cause and it was not whimsical, at least, in this instance. It is correct to say
that prevailing conditions affecting national security and stability must also be taken
into account. However, for the reasons above elucidated, I take exception to the
conclusion that the conditions in Section 5(b) of Rule 113 had been complied with in
this case. It is true that the corresponding information was filed against Nazareno
shortly after his arrest but that, precisely, is another cause for controversy. Definitely, if
the rules on arrest are scrupulously observed, there would be no need for the usual
invocation of Ilagan as a curative balm for unwarranted incursions into civil liberties.
SARMIENTO, J.: dissenting:
I reiterate my dissent. I submit that in spite of its "clarificatory" resolution, 1 the
majority has not shown why the arrests in question should after all be sustained.
According to the majority, Rolando Dural (G.R. No. 815667) was validly arrested
without a warrant and that his arrest was sufficient compliance with the provisions of
Section 5, paragraph (b), Rule 113, of the Rules of Court. According to the majority,
he, Dural, was after all committing an offense (subversion being supposedly a
continuing offense) and that the military did have personal knowledge that he had
committed it. "Personal knowledge," according to the majority, is supposedly no more
than "actual belief or reasonable grounds . . . of suspicion," and suspicion is
supposedly reasonable:
. . . when, in the absence of actual belief of the arresting officers,
the suspicion that the person to be arrested is probably guilty of
committing the offense, is based on actual facts, i.e., supported
by circumstances sufficiently strong in themselves to create the
probable cause of guilty of the person to be arrested. A
reasonable suspicion therefore must be founded on probable
cause, coupled with good faith on the part of the peace officers
making the arrest. 2
As I said, I dissent.
First, and as I held, subversion, as an offense punished by Executive Order No. 167,
as amended by Executive Order No. 276, in relation to Republic Act No. 1700, 3 is
made up of "overt acts." 4 In People vs. Ferrer 5 this Court defined "overt acts" as
follows:
. . . Indeed, were the Anti-Subversion Act a bill of attainder, it
would be totally unnecessary to charge Communists in court, as
the law alone, without more would suffice to secure their
punishment. But the undeniable fact is that their guilt still has to
be judicially established. The Government has yet to prove at the
trial that the accused joined the Party knowingly, willfully and by
overt acts, and that they joined the Party, knowing its subversive
character and with specific intent to further its basic objective, i.e.,
prosecution." 11 Here, it is worse, because we do not even know who that informant
was.
The majority is apparently unaware that under Executive Order No. 212, amending
Presidential Decree No. 169, hospital establishments are required to report cases of
acts of violence to "government health authorities" not to the military.
I am concerned that if the military were truly armed with reliable information and if it
did have personal knowledge to believe that Dural had committed an offense, there
was no reason for the military to ignore the courts, to which the Constitution after all,
gives the authority to issue warrants. As People vs. Burgos held:
More important, we find no compelling reason for the haste with
which the arresting officers sought to arrest the accused. We fail
to see why they failed to first go through the process of obtaining
a warrant of arrest, if indeed they had reasonable ground to
believe that the accused had truly committed a crime. There is no
showing that there was a real apprehension that the accused was
on the verge of flight or escape. Likewise, there is no showing that
the whereabouts of the accused were unknown. 12
I do not likewise see how the petitioners Amelia Roque, Wilfredo Buenaobra, Domingo
Anonuevo, Ramon Caspile, and Vicky Ocaya (G.R. Nos. 84581-82; 83162) could have
been lawfully picked up under similar circumstances. As the majority points out, the
military had (again) acted on a mere tip-the military had no personal knowledge (as I
elaborated what personal knowledge means). Second, I do not think that the majority
can say that since Amelia Roque, et al. "were NPA's anyway" (As Roque, et al.
allegedly admitted), immediatearrests were "prudent" and necessary. As I said, that
Roque, et al. were admitted "NPA's" is (was) the question before the trial court and
precisely, the subject of controversy. I think it is imprudent for this Court to pass
judgment on the guilt of the petitioners-since after all, and as the majority points out,
we are talking simply of the legality of the petitioner's arrests.
More important, that Roque, et al. "were NPA's anyway" is evidently, a mere say-so of
the military, and evidently, the Court is not bound by bare say-so's. Evidently, we can
not approve an arrest simply because the military says it is a valid arrest (the accused
being "NPA's anyway") that would be abdication of judicial duty and when,
moreover, the very basis of the claim rests on dubious "confidential information."
According to the majority, we are speaking of simple arrests; we are not talking of the
guilt or innocence of the accused. I certainly hope not, after the majority referred to
Rolando Dural as a "sparrow man" and having Amelia Roque, et al. admit to being
NPA's."
It is to gloss over at any rate, the nature of arrest as a restraining on liberty. It is to me
immaterial that the guilt of the accused still has to be established, since meanwhile,
the accused are in fact being deprived of liberty. Arrest to me, is something to crow
about, even if in the opinion of the majority, it is nothing to crow about (a mere
"administrative measure").
I can not, again, accept the validity of the arrests of Deogracia Espiritu or Narciso
Nazareno (G.R. Nos. 85727; 86332). Espiritu was supposedly picked up for inciting to
sedition, in uttering supposedly, on November 22, 1988, the following:
Command to claim that it "came to know that Nazareno was probably one of those
guilty in the killing of Bunye II" 25and none of us can possibly dispute it.
I would like to stress strongly that we are not talking of a simple "administrative
measure" alonewe are talking ofarrests, of depriving people of libertyeven if we
are not yet talking of whether or not people are guilty. That we are not concerned with
guilt or innocence is hardly the point, I respectfully submit, and it will not minimize the
significance of the petitioners' predicament.
With respect to Wilfredo Buenaobra, I submit that the majority has, as in the cases of
Amelia Roque, et al., ignored the fact that Buenaobra's alleged "admission" (actually,
an uncounselled confession) was precisely, the basis for Buenaobra's arrest. It is to
beg the question, I respectfully submit, to approve the military's action for the reason
that Buenaobra confessed, because Buenaobra confessed for the reason that the
military, precisely, pounced on him. I am not to be mistaken for prejudging
Buenaobra's innocence (although it is supposed to be presumed) but I can not
imagine that Buenaobra would have voluntarily proclaimed to the military that he was
an NPA courier so that the military could pounce on him.
I respectfully submit that the cases Garcia vs. Padilla 26 and Ilagan vs. Enrile 27 have
been better days. I do not see how this court can continuously sustain them "where
national security and stability are still directly challenged perhaps with greater vigor
from the communist rebels." 28 First and foremost, and as the majority has conceded,
we do not know if we are in fact dealing with "Communists." The case of Deogracias
Espiritu, for one, hardly involves subversion. Second, "Communism" and "national
security" are old hat the dictator's own excuses to perpetuate tyranny, and I am
genuinely disappointed that we would still fall for old excuses. Third, Garcia and Ilagan
rested on supposed grounds that can not be possibly justified in a regime that
respects the rule of law that the Presidential Commitment Order (PCO) is a valid
presidential document (Garcia) and that the filing of an information cures a defective
arrest (Ilagan). Fourth and finally, it is evident that neither "Communist threat" nor
"national security" are valid grounds for warrantless arrests under Section 5(b) of Rule
113.
I most respectfully submit that Garcia and Ilagan have not only been diluted by
subsequent jurisprudence (e.g., People vs. Burgos, supra), they are relics of
authoritarian rule that can no longer be defended, if they could have been defended,
in Plaza Miranda or before our own peers in the bar.
"What is important," says the majority, "is that every arrest without warrant be tested
as to its legality, via habeas corpus proceedings." 29 I supposed that goes without
saying. But it is also to patronize the petitioners and simply, to offer a small
consolation, when after all, this Court is validating their continued detention. 30 With
all due respect, I submit that it is nothing for which the public should be elated.
A Final Word
As I began my dissent, in this Resolution and the Decision sought to be reconsidered,
I reiterate one principle: The State has no right to bother citizens without infringing
their right against arbitrary State action. "The right of the people," states the
Constitution, "to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects against
unreasonable searchers and seizures of whatever nature and for any purpose shall be
inviolable . . . ." 31 "The State," the Charter likewise states, "values the dignity of every
human person and guarantees full respect for human rights." 32 The Constitution
states the general rule the majority would make the exception the rule, and the rule
the exception. With all due respect, this is not what constitutionalism is all about.
I submit that the "actual facts and circumstances" the majority refers to are, in the first
place, doubtful, the "actual facts and circumstances" being no more than "confidential
information" (manufactured or genuine, we have no way of telling) and in the second
place, any information with which the military (or police) were armed could no more
than be hearsay, not personal, information. I submit that the "actual facts and
circumstances" the majority insists on can not justify the arrests in question under
Section 5(b) of Rule 113, the rule the majority insists is the applicable rule.
Apparently, Section 5(b) is not the applicable rule, as far as Deogracias Espiritu and
Narciso Nazareno are concerned; certainly, it is not the Section 5(b) I know. As I
indicated, Espiritu was arrested one day after the act, allegedly, inciting to sedition;
Nazareno was picked up fourteen days after it (allegedly, murder). Yet, the majority
would approve the police's actions nonetheless because the police supposedly "found
out only later." I submit that the majority has read into Section 5(b) a provision that has
not been written there.
"More than the allure of popularity of palatability to some groups," concludes the
majority, "what is important is that the Court be right." 33
Nobody has suggested in the first place, that Umil was and is a question of popularity
or palatability. Umil is a question, on the contrary, of whether or not the military (or
police), in effecting the arrests assailed, had complied with the requirements of law on
warrantless arrests. Umil is a question of whether or not this Court, in approving the
military's actions, is right.
In spite of "EDSA", a climate of fear persists in the country, as incidences of
disappearances, torture, hamletting, bombings, saturation drives, and various human
rights violations increase in alarming rates. In its update for October, 1990, the Task
Force Detainees of the Philippines found:
An average of 209 arrested for political reasons monthly since 1988, 94% of them
illegally;
Four thousand four hundred eight (4,408) political detentions from January, 1989 to
September, 1990, 4,419, illegally;
Of those arrested, 535 showed signs of torture; 280 were eventually salvaged, 40, of
frustrated salvage, and 109 remained missing after their arrest;
Forty (40) cases of massacres, with 218 killed; 54 cases of frustrated massacre, in
which 157 were wounded;
The victims belonged to neighborhood and union organizations;
Since February, 1986, 532 of those illegally arrested were women;
From January to June 1990, 361 children were detained for no apparent reason;
One million ten thousand four hundred nine (1,010,409) have been injured as a
consequence of bombing, shellings, and food blockades undertaken by the military
since 1988. 34
It is a bleak picture, and I am disturbed that this Court should express very little
concern. I am also disappointed that it is the portrait of the Court I am soon leaving.
Nonetheless, I am hopeful that despite my departure, it will not be too late.
Motions denied.
# Footnotes
1 G.R. No. 61388, April 20,1983,121 SCRA 472.
2 G.R. No. 70748, October 21,1985,139 SCRA 349.
3 Section 1, Rule 102: "To what habeas corpus extends. Except
otherwise expressly provided by law, the writ of habeas corpus shall extend
to all cases of illegal confinement or detention by which any person is
deprived of his liberty, or by which the rightful custody of any person is
withheld from the person entitled thereto.
4 Villavicencio vs. Lukban, 39 Phil. 778.
5 Ilagan vs. Enrile, G.R. No. 70748, October 21, 1985, 139 SCRA 349.
6 Sayo vs. Chief of Police, 80 Phil. 859 (1948).
7 Republic Act No. 1700 known as the "Anti-Subversion Act" titled "An Act
to outlaw the CPP and similar associations, penalize membership therein
and for other purposes." (1957); and the subsequent related decrees such
as Presidential Decree No. 885, entitled "Outlawing subversive
organizations, penalizing membership therein, and for other purposes."
(1976); and Presidential Decree No. 1835 entitled "Codifying the various
laws on anti-subversion and increasing the penalties for membership in
subversive organizations."
8 G.R. No. 61388. April 20,1983,121 SCRA 472.
9 US vs. Santos, 36 Phil. 851 (1917).
10 Ibid.
11 Ibid.
12 Records of G.R. No. 81567, affidavit dated 4 February 1988.
13 Rollo, pp. 311-312 (G.R. No. 81567).
14 Presidential Decree No. 169 requires attending physicians and/or
persons treating injuries from any form of violence, to report such fact to
the Philippine Constabulary and prescribing penalties for any violation
thereof.
15 Decision dated 9 July 1990, pp. 19-20.
16 Decision, pp. 10-11.
17 Ibid., p. 12.
18 Ibid., pp. 12-13.
19 Ibid., pp. 14-15.
20 Decision, p. 18.
21 United States vs. Sanchez, No. 9294, March 30,1914, 27 Phil, 442.
22 Ibid: "The legality of the detention does not depend upon the fact of the
crime, but . . . upon the nature of the deed, wherefrom such
characterization may reasonably be inferred by the officer or functionary to
whom the law at that moment leaves the decision for the urgent purpose of
suspending the liberty of the citizen.
"In People vs. Ancheta, it was held that "the legality of detention made by a
person in authority or an agent thereof ... does not depend upon the
juridical and much less the judicial fact of crime which, at the time of its
commission, is not and cannot definitively be determined for the lack of
necessary data and for jurisdiction but upon the nature of the deed. . . . ."
23 United States vs. Santos, supra.
24 Ibid.
25 Article 124 of the Revised Penal Code provides:
"ART. 124. Arbitrary detention. Any public officer or employee who,
without legal grounds. detains a person, shall suffer:
LT. (SG) EUGENE GONZALES, LT. (SG) ANDY TORRATO, LT. (SG) ANTONIO
TRILLANES IV, CPT. GARY ALEJANO, LT. (SG) JAMES LAYUG, CPT. GERARDO
GAMBALA, CPT. NICANOR FAELDON, LT. (SG) MANUEL CABOCHAN, ENS.
ARMAND PONTEJOS, LT. (JG) ARTURO PASCUA, and 1LT. JONNEL
SANGGALANG, Petitioners,
vs.
GEN. NARCISO ABAYA, in his capacity as Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of
the Philippines, and B. GEN. MARIANO M. SARMIENTO, JR., in his capacity as
the Judge Advocate General of the Judge Advocate Generals Office
(JAGO), Respondents.
them to lay down their arms and defuse the explosives placed around the premises of
the Oakwood Apartments. Eventually, they returned to their barracks.
A total of 321 soldiers, including petitioners herein, surrendered to the authorities.
The National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) investigated the incident and
recommended that the military personnel involved be charged with coup detat defined
and penalized under Article 134-A of the Revised Penal Code, as amended. On July
31, 2003, the Chief State Prosecutor of the Department of Justice (DOJ)
recommended the filing of the corresponding Information against them.
DECISION
SANDOVAL-GUTIERREZ, J.:
For our resolution is the Petition for Prohibition (with prayer for a temporary restraining
order) filed by the above-named members of the Armed Forces of the Philippines
(AFP), herein petitioners, against the AFP Chief of Staff and the Judge Advocate
General, respondents.
The facts are:
On July 26, 2003, President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo received intelligence reports
that some members of the AFP, with high-powered weapons, had abandoned their
designated places of assignment. Their aim was to destabilize the government. The
President then directed the AFP and the Philippine National Police (PNP) to track and
arrest them.
On July 27, 2003 at around 1:00 a.m., more than 300 heavily armed junior officers and
enlisted men of the AFP mostly from the elite units of the Armys Scout Rangers and
the Navys Special Warfare Group entered the premises of the Oakwood Premier
Luxury Apartments on Ayala Avenue, Makati City. They disarmed the security guards
and planted explosive devices around the building.
Led by Navy Lt. (SG) Antonio Trillanes IV, the troops sported red armbands
emblazoned with the emblem of the"Magdalo" faction of the Katipunan. 1 The troops
then, through broadcast media, announced their grievances against the administration
of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, such as the graft and corruption in the military,
the illegal sale of arms and ammunition to the "enemies" of the State, and the
bombings in Davao City intended to acquire more military assistance from the US
government. They declared their withdrawal of support from their Commander-in-Chief
and demanded that she resign as President of the Republic. They also called for the
resignation of her cabinet members and the top brass of the AFP and PNP.
About noontime of the same day, President Arroyo issued Proclamation No. 427
declaring a state of rebellion, followed by General Order No. 4 directing the AFP and
PNP to take all necessary measures to suppress the rebellion then taking place in
Makati City. She then called the soldiers to surrender their weapons at five oclock in
the afternoon of that same day.
In order to avoid a bloody confrontation, the government sent negotiators to dialogue
with the soldiers. The aim was to persuade them to peacefully return to the fold of the
law. After several hours of negotiation, the government panel succeeded in convincing
Case No. 03-2784. Accordingly, the prosecution filed with the RTC an Amended
Information. 6
In an Order dated November 14, 2003, the RTC admitted the Amended Information
and dropped the charge ofcoup detat against the 290 accused.
Subsequently, or on December 12, 2003, the Pre-Trial Investigation Panel submitted
its Final Pre-Trial Investigation Report 7 to the JAGO, recommending that, following
the "doctrine of absorption," those charged withcoup detat before the RTCshould not
be charged before the military tribunal for violation of the Articles of War.
For its part, the RTC, on February 11, 2004, issued an Order 8 stating that "all charges
before the court martial against the accusedare hereby declared not serviceconnected, but rather absorbed and in furtherance of the alleged crime of coup detat."
The trial court then proceeded to hear petitioners applications for bail.
In the meantime, Colonel Julius A. Magno, in his capacity as officer-in-charge of the
JAGO, reviewed the findings of the Pre-Trial Investigation Panel. He recommended
that 29 of the officers involved in the Oakwood incident, including petitioners, be
prosecuted before a general court martial for violation of Article 96 (conduct
unbecoming an officer and a gentleman) of the Articles of War.
On June 17, 2004, Colonel Magnos recommendation was approved by the AFP top
brass. The AFP Judge Advocate General then directed petitioners to submit their
answer to the charge. Instead of complying, they filed with this Court the instant
Petition for Prohibition praying that respondents be ordered to desist from charging
them with violation of Article 96 of the Articles of War in relation to the Oakwood
incident. 9
Petitioners maintain that since the RTC has made a determination in its Order of
February 11, 2004 that the offense for violation of Article 96 (conduct unbecoming an
officer and a gentleman) of the Articles of War is not service-connected, but is
absorbed in the crime of coup detat, the military tribunal cannot compel them to
submit to its jurisdiction.
War; 11 that "the offense charged prescribed on July 25, 2005;" 12 that the General
Court Martial ruled, however, that "the prescriptive period shall end only at 12:00
midnight of July 26, 2005;" 13 that "(a)s midnight of July 26, 2005 was approaching and
it was becoming apparent that the accused could not be arraigned, the prosecution
suddenly changed its position and asserted that 23 of the accused have already been
arraigned;" 14 and that petitioners moved for a reconsideration but it was denied by the
general court martial in its Order dated September 14, 2005. 15
In his Comment, the Solicitor General prays that the Supplemental Petition be denied
for lack of merit. He alleges that "contrary to petitioners pretensions, all the accused
were duly arraigned on July 13 and 18, 2005." 16 The "(r)ecords show that in the
hearing on July 13, 2005, all the 29 accused were present" and, "(o)n that day, Military
Prosecutor Captain Karen Ong Jags read the Charges and Specifications from the
Charge Sheet in open court (pp. 64, TSN, July 13, 2005)." 17
The sole question for our resolution is whether the petitioners are entitled to the writ of
prohibition.
There is no dispute that petitioners, being officers of the AFP, are subject to military
law. Pursuant to Article 1 (a) of Commonwealth Act No. 408, as amended, otherwise
known as the Articles of War, the term "officer" is "construed to refer to a
commissioned officer." Article 2 provides:
Art. 2. Persons Subject to Military Law. The following persons are subject to these
articles and shall be understood as included in the term "any person subject to military
law" or "persons subject to military law," whenever used in these articles:
(a) All officers and soldiers in the active service of the Armed Forces of the
Philippines or of the Philippine Constabulary, all members of the reserve force, from
the dates of their call to active duty and while on such active duty; all trainees
undergoing military instructions; and all other persons lawfully called, drafted, or
ordered into, or to duty or for training in the said service, from the dates they are
required by the terms of the call, draft, or order to obey the same.
Upon the other hand, Section 1 of R.A. No. 7055 reads:
The Solicitor General, representing the respondents, counters that R.A. No. 7055
specifies which offenses covered by the Articles of War areservice-connected. These
are violations of Articles 54 to 70, 72 to 92, and 95 to 97. The law provides that
violations of these Articles are properly cognizable by the court martial. As the charge
against petitioners is violation of Article 96 which, under R.A. No. 7055 is a serviceconnected offense, then it falls under the jurisdiction of the court martial.
Subsequently, petitioners filed with this Court a Supplemental Petition raising the
additional issue that the offense charged before the General Court Martial has
prescribed. Petitioners alleged therein that during the pendency of their original
petition, respondents proceeded with the Pre-Trial Investigation for purposes of
charging them with violation of Article 96 (conduct unbecoming an officer and a
gentleman) of the Articles of War; that the Pre-Trial Investigation Panel then referred
the case to the General Court Martial; that "almost two years since the Oakwood
incident on July 27, 2003, only petitioner Lt. (SG) Antonio Trillanes was arraigned, and
this was done under questionable circumstances;" 10 that in the hearing of July 26,
2005, herein petitioners moved for the dismissal of the case on the ground that they
were not arraigned within the prescribed period of two (2) years from the date of the
commission of the alleged offense, in violation of Article 38 of the Articles of
SEC. 1. Members of the Armed Forces of the Philippines and other persons subject to
military law, including members of the Citizens Armed Forces Geographical Units, who
commit crimes or offenses penalized under the Revised Penal Code, other special
penal laws, or local government ordinances, regardless of whether or not civilians are
co-accused, victims, or offended parties, which may be natural or juridical persons,
shall be tried by the proper civil court, except when the offense, as determined before
arraignment by the civil court, is service-connected, in which case, the offense shall be
tried by court-martial, Provided, That the President of the Philippines may, in the
interest of justice, order or direct at any time before arraignment that any such crimes
or offenses be tried by the proper civil courts.
As used in this Section, service-connected crimes or offenses shall be limited to those
defined in Articles 54 to 70, Articles 72 to 92, and Articles 95 to 97 of Commonwealth
Act No. 408, as amended.
In imposing the penalty for such crimes or offenses, the court-martial may take into
consideration the penalty prescribed therefor in the Revised Penal Code, other special
laws, or local government ordinances.
Section 1 of R.A. No. 7055, quoted above, is clear and unambiguous. First, it lays
down the general rule that members of the AFP and other persons subject to military
law, including members of the Citizens Armed Forces Geographical Units, who commit
crimes or offenses penalized under the Revised Penal Code (like coup detat), other
special penal laws, or local ordinances shall be tried by the proper civil court. Next, it
provides the exception to the general rule, i.e., where the civil court, before
arraignment, has determined the offense to be service-connected, then the offending
soldier shall be tried by a court martial. Lastly, the law states an exception to the
exception, i.e., where the President of the Philippines, in the interest of justice, directs
before arraignment that any such crimes or offenses be tried by the proper civil court.
The second paragraph of the same provision further identifies the "service-connected
crimes or offenses" as "limited to those defined in Articles 54 to 70, Articles 72 to
92, and Articles 95 to 97" of the Articles of War. Violations of these specified Articles
are triable by court martial. This delineates the jurisdiction between the civil courts
and the court martial over crimes or offenses committed by military personnel.
Such delineation of jurisdiction by R.A. No. 7055 is necessary to preserve the peculiar
nature of military justice system over military personnel charged with serviceconnected offenses. The military justice system is disciplinary in nature, aimed at
achieving the highest form of discipline in order to ensure the highest degree of
military efficiency. 18 Military law is established not merely to enforce discipline in times
of war, but also to preserve the tranquility and security of the State in time of peace;
for there is nothing more dangerous to the public peace and safety than a licentious
and undisciplined military body. 19 The administration of military justice has been
universally practiced. Since time immemorial, all the armies in almost all countries of
the world look upon the power of military law and its administration as the most
effective means of enforcing discipline. For this reason, the court martial has become
invariably an indispensable part of any organized armed forces, it being the most
potent agency in enforcing discipline both in peace and in war. 20
Here, petitioners are charged for violation of Article 96 (conduct unbecoming an officer
and a gentleman) of the Articles of War before the court martial, thus:
All persons subject to military law, did on or about 27 July 2003 at Oakwood Hotel,
Makati City, Metro Manila, willfully, unlawfully and feloniously violate their solemn
oath as officers to defend the Constitution, the law and the duly-constituted
authorities and abused their constitutional duty to protect the people and the
State by, among others, attempting to oust the incumbent duly-elected and legitimate
President by force and violence, seriously disturbing the peace and tranquility of the
people and the nation they are sworn to protect,thereby causing dishonor and
disrespect to the military profession, conduct unbecoming an officer and a
gentleman, in violation of AW 96 of the Articles of War.
CONTRARY TO LAW. (Underscoring ours)
Article 96 of the Articles of War 21 provides:
ART. 96. Conduct Unbecoming an Officer and Gentleman. Any officer, member of
the Nurse Corps, cadet, flying cadet, or probationary second lieutenant, who is
convicted of conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman shall be dismissed
from the service. (Underscoring ours)
We hold that the offense for violation of Article 96 of the Articles of War is serviceconnected. This is expressly provided in Section 1 (second paragraph) of R.A. No.
7055. It bears stressing that the charge against the petitioners concerns the
alleged violation of their solemn oath as officers to defend the Constitution and the
duly-constituted authorities.Such violation allegedly caused dishonor and disrespect
to the military profession. In short, the charge has a bearing on
their professional conduct or behavior as military officers. Equally indicative of the
"service-connected" nature of the offense is the penalty prescribed for the same
dismissal from the service imposable only by the military court.Such penalty
is purely disciplinary in character, evidently intended to cleanse the military
profession of misfits and to preserve the stringent standard of military discipline.
Obviously, there is no merit in petitioners argument that they can no longer be
charged before the court martial for violation of Article 96 of the Articles of War
because the same has been declared by the RTC in its Order of February 11, 2004 as
"not service-connected, but rather absorbed and in furtherance of the alleged crime
of coup detat," hence, triable by said court (RTC). The RTC, in making such
declaration, practically amended the law which expressly vests in the court martial the
jurisdiction over "service-connected crimes or offenses." What the law has conferred
the court should not take away. It is only the Constitution or the law that bestows
jurisdiction on the court, tribunal, body or officer over the subject matter or nature of an
action which can do so. 22 And it is only through a constitutional amendment or
legislative enactment that such act can be done. The first and fundamental duty of the
courts is merely to apply the law "as they find it, not as they like it to be." 23 Evidently,
such declaration by the RTC constitutes grave abuse of discretion tantamount to lack
or excess of jurisdiction and is, therefore, void.
In Navales v. Abaya., 24 this Court, through Mr. Justice Romeo J. Callejo, Sr., held:
We agree with the respondents that the sweeping declaration made by the RTC
(Branch 148) in the dispositive portion of its Order dated February 11, 2004 that all
charges before the court-martial against the accused were not service-connected, but
absorbed and in furtherance of the crime of coup detat, cannot be given effect. x x x,
such declaration was made without or in excess of jurisdiction; hence, a nullity.
The second paragraph of the above provision (referring to Section 1 of R.A. No. 7055)
explicitly specifies what are considered "service-connected crimes or offenses" under
Commonwealth Act No. 408, as amended, also known as the Articles of War, to wit:
Articles 54 to 70:
Art. 54. Fraudulent Enlistment.
Art. 55. Officer Making Unlawful Enlistment.
Art. 56. False Muster.
Art. 57. False Returns.
Art. 58. Certain Acts to Constitute Desertion.
Art. 59. Desertion.
Art. 60. Advising or Aiding Another to Desert.
Art. 61. Entertaining a Deserter.
Art. 62. Absence Without Leave.
Art. 63. Disrespect Toward the President, Vice-President,
Congress of the Philippines, or Secretary of National
Defense.
Art. 64. Disrespect Toward Superior Officer.
Art. 65. Assaulting or Willfully Disobeying Superior Officer.
Art. 66. Insubordinate Conduct Toward Non-Commissioned Officer.
Art. 67. Mutiny or Sedition.
83 [1953]). Military personnel carry high-powered arms and other lethal weapons not
allowed to civilians. History, experience, and the nature of a military organization
dictate that military personnel must be subjected to a separate disciplinary system not
applicable to unarmed civilians or unarmed government personnel.
A civilian government employee reassigned to another place by his superior may
question his reassignment by asking a temporary restraining order or injunction from a
civil court. However, a soldier cannot go to a civil court and ask for a restraining or
injunction if his military commander reassigns him to another area of military
operations. If this is allowed, military discipline will collapse.
xxx
This Court has recognized that courts-martial are instrumentalities of the Executive to
enable the President, as Commander-in-Chief, to effectively command, control, and
discipline the armed forces (see Ruffy v. Chief of Staff, 75 Phil. 875 [1946], citing
Winthrops Military Law and Precedents, 2nd edition, p. 49). In short, courts-martial
form part of the disciplinary system that ensures the Presidents control, and thus
civilian supremacy, over the military. At the apex of this disciplinary system is the
President who exercises review powers over decisions of courts-martial (citing Article
50 of the Articles of War; quoted provisions omitted).
xxx
While the Court had intervened before in courts-martial or similar proceedings, it did
so sparingly and only to release a military personnel illegally detained (Ognir v.
Director of Prisons, 80 Phil. 401 [1948] or to correct objectionable procedures
(Yamashita v. Styer, 75 Phil. 563 [1945]). The Court has never suppressed courtmartial proceedings on the ground that the offense charged is absorbed and in
furtherance of another criminal charge pending with the civil courts. The Court may
now do so only if the offense charged is not one of the service-connected offenses
specified in Section 1 of RA 7055. Such is not the situation in the present case.
With respect to the issue of prescription raised by petitioners in their Supplemental
Petition, suffice it to say that we cannot entertain the same. The contending parties
are at loggerheads as to (a) who among the petitioners were actually arraigned, and
(b) the dates of their arraignment. These are matters involving questions of fact, not
within our power of review, as we are not a trier of facts. In a petition for prohibition,
such as the one at bar, only legal issues affecting the jurisdiction of the tribunal, board
or officer involved may be resolved on the basis of the undisputed facts. 26
Clearly, the instant petition for prohibition must fail. The office of prohibition is to
prevent the unlawful and oppressive exercise of authority and is directed against
proceedings that are done without or in excess of jurisdiction, or with grave abuse of
discretion, there being no appeal or other plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the
ordinary course of law. 27 Stated differently, prohibition is the remedy to prevent inferior
courts, corporations, boards, or persons from usurping or exercising a jurisdiction or
power with which they have not been vested by law. 28
In fine, this Court holds that herein respondents have the authority in convening a
court martial and in charging petitioners with violation of Article 96 of the Articles of
War.
WHEREFORE, the instant petition for prohibition is DISMISSED.
SO ORDERED.
ANGELINA SANDOVAL-GUTIERREZ
10
11
Associate Justice
"Article 38. As to Time. Except for desertion or murder committed in time of war, or
for mutiny, no person subject to military law shall be liable to be tried or punished by a
court-martial for any crime or offense committed more than two years before the
arraignment of such person: x x x."
WE CONCUR:
ARTEMIO V. PANGANIBAN
Chief Justice
REYNATO S. PUNO
Associate Justice
CONSUELO YNARES-SANTIAGO
Associate Justice
MA. ALICIA AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ
Associate Justice
CONCHITA CARPIO MORALES
Associate Justice
ADOLFO S. AZCUNA
Associate Justice
MINITA V. CHICO-NAZARIO
Associate Justice
LEONARDO A. QUISUMBING
Associate Justice
ANTONIO T. CARPIO
Associate Justice
ENATO C. CORONA
Associate Justice
ROMEO J. CALLEJO, SR.
Associate Justice
DANTE O. TINGA
Associate Justice
CANCIO C. GARCIA
Associate Justice
Footnotes
1
12
13
Par. 9, id.
Par. 10, id. Petitioners stated, under this footnote, that the "(r)ulings before the
General Court Martial were done orally; unavailability of the TSN for the July 26, 2005
hearing."
14
15
16
Comment, p. 10.
17
Id., p. 18.
18
19
Id.
20
As defined and penalized under Article 134-A of the Revised Penal Code, as
amended.
2
Commonwealth Act No. 408, as amended by Republic Act No. 242 (approved on
June 12, 1948).
22
Entitled "An Act for Making Further and More Effectual Provision for the National
Defense by Establishing a System of Military Justice for Persons Subject to Military
Law."
Entitled "An Act Strengthening Civilian Supremacy Over The Military By Returning To
The Civil Courts The Jurisdiction Over Certain Offenses Involving Members Of The
Armed Forces Of The Philippines, Other Persons Subject To Military Law, And The
Members Of The Philippine National Police, Repealing For The Purpose Certain
Presidential Decrees."
Arnado v.Buban, A.M. No. MTJ-04-1543, May 31, 2004, 430 SCRA 382, 386;
Republic v. Estipular, G.R. No. 136588, July 20, 2000, 336 SCRA 333, 340.
23
Resins, Inc. v. Auditor General, G.R. No. 17888, October 29, 1968, 25 SCRA 754.
24
G.R. Nos. 162318 and 162341, October 25, 2004, 441 SCRA 393, 409-421.
25
E.g., Murder (Article 248) and Robbery (Articles 294-295) absorbed by Rebellion
(Article 134) of the Revised Penal Code (People v. Hernandez, 99 Phil. 515 [1956];
Illegal Possession of Marijuana (Section 8, Republic Act No. 6425) absorbed by Illegal
Sale of Marijuana (Section 4, Republic Act No. 6425) (People v. De Jesus, 229 Phil.
518 [1986]).
28
Matuguina Integrated Wood Products, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 98310,
October 24, 1996, 263 SCRA 490.
Article 96 of the Articles of War defines the punitive act of conduct unbecoming an
officer and a gentleman as follows:
Art. 96. Conduct Unbecoming an Officer and Gentleman. Any officer, cadet, flying
cadet, or probationary second lieutenant, who is convicted of conduct unbecoming an
officer and a gentleman shall be dismissed from the service.
Case law has it that common crimes committed in furtherance of a political crime,
such as rebellion, are therein absorbed. A political crime is one directly aimed against
the political order as well as such common crimes as may be committed to achieve a
political purpose. The decisive factor is the intent or motive. Coup detat is a political
crime because the purpose of the plotters is to seize or diminish State power. If a
crime usually regarded as common, like murder, is perpetrated to achieve a political
purpose, then said common crime is stripped of its common complexion, inasmuch as,
being part and parcel of the crime of rebellion, the former acquires the political
character of the latter. 1 Such common offenses assume the political complexion of the
main crime of which they are mere ingredients, and, consequently, cannot be
punished separately from the principal offense, or complexed with the same to justify
the imposition of the graver penalty. 2
In Ponce Enrile v. Amin, 3 the court ruled that the principle of absorption of common
crimes by the political crime applies to crimes defined and penalized by special laws,
such as Presidential Decree No. 1829, otherwise known as Obstruction of Justice.
However, in Baylosis v. Chavez,
Jr., 4 the Court ruled that the rulings of this Court in People v. Hernandez, 5 Ponce
Enrile v. Amin 6 and Enrile v. Salazar, 7 do not apply to crimes which, by statutory fiat,
are sui generis.
Indeed, the service-connected punitive acts defined and penalized under the Articles
of War are sui generis offenses not absorbed by rebellion perpetrated, inter alia, by
the officers and enlisted personnel of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) or
coup detat. This is so because such acts or omissions are merely violations of military
discipline, designed to secure a higher efficiency in the military service; in other words,
they are purely disciplinary in their nature, and have exclusive regard to the special
character and relation of the AFP officers and enlisted personnel. Laws providing for
the discipline as well as the organization of the AFP are essential to the efficiency for
the military service in case their services should ever be required. "Deprive the
executive branch of the government of the power to enforce proper military regulations
by fine and imprisonment, and that, too, by its own courts-martial, which from time
immemorial have exercised this right, and we at once paralyze all efforts to secure
proper discipline in the military service, and have little left but a voluntary organization,
without cohesive force." 8
It bears stressing that for determining how best the AFP shall attend to the business of
fighting or preparing to fight rests with Congress and with the President. Both
Congress and this Court have found that the special character of the military requires
civilian authorities to accord military commanders some flexibility in dealing with
matters that affect internal discipline and morale. In construing a statute that touches
on such matters, therefore, courts must be careful not to circumscribe the authority of
military commanders to an extent never intended by Congress. Under these and many
similar cases reviewing legislative and executive control of the military, the sentencing
scheme at issue in this case, and the manner in which it was created, are
constitutionally unassailable.9
Officers and enlisted personnel committing punitive acts under the Articles of War may
be prosecuted and convicted if found guilty of such acts independently of, and
separately from, any charges filed in the civilian courts for the same or similar acts
which are penalized under the Revised Penal Code, under special penal laws or
ordinances; and prescinding from the outcome thereof.
At this point, it is well to have a basic understanding of the Articles of War under
Commonwealth Act No. 408, which was essentially copied from that of the United
States, which, in turn, had been superseded by the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
Our Articles of War has since been amended by Republic Act Nos. 242 and 516.
The Articles of War is the organic law of the AFP and, in keeping with the history of
military law, its primary function is to enforce "the highest form of discipline in order to
ensure the highest degree of military efficiency." The following commentary is
enlightening:
History points out the fact that nations have always engaged in wars. For that
purpose, bodies of men have been organized into armed forces under a commanderin-chief who, through his subordinate commanders, enforces the highest form of
discipline in order to ensure the highest degree of military efficiency.
Victory in battle is the ultimate aim of every military commander, and he knows that
victory cannot be attained, no matter how superior his forces may be, in men and
materials, if discipline among the rank-and-file is found wanting. For, "if an Army is to
be anything but an uncontrolled mob, discipline is required and must be enforced." For
this reason, in order to set an effective means of enforcing discipline, all organized
armies of the world have promulgated sets of rules and regulations and later, laws as
embodied in the articles of war, which define the duties of military personnel and
distinguish infractions of military law and impose appropriate punishment for violation
thereof. 10
Every officer, before he enters in the duties of his office, subscribes to these articles
and places himself within the powers of courts-martial to pass on any offense which
he may have committed in contravention thereof. 11
It is said that conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman is a uniquely military
offense. 12 In order to constitute the said offense, the misconduct must offend so
seriously against the law, justice, morality or decorum as to expose to disgrace,
socially or as a man, the offender, and at the same time must be of such a nature or
committed under such circumstances as to bring dishonor or disrepute upon the
military profession which he represents. 13 The article proscribing conduct unbecoming
an officer and a gentleman has been held to be wholly independent of other definitions
of offenses, and the same course of conduct may constitute an offense elsewhere
provided for and may also warrant a conviction under this provision; it is not subject to
preemption by other punitive articles. 14
As enunciated by the United States Supreme Court, "the military is, by necessity, a
specialized society separate from civilian society. It has, again by necessity,
developed laws and traditions of its own during its long history. The differences
between the military and civilian communities result from the fact that it is the primary
business of armies and navies to fight or ready to fight wars should the occasion
arise." 17 Further, the US Supreme Court quite succinctly stated that "the military
constitutes a specialized community governed by a separate discipline from that of the
civilian." 18
I wish to emphasize, however, a caveat: not all service-connected punitive acts under
the Articles of War may be prosecuted before the courts-martial independently of a
crime defined and penalized under the Revised Penal Code against the same
accused based on the same set of delictual acts. Congress may criminalize a serviceconnected punitive offense under the Articles of War.
A review of the deliberations in the Senate or the Report of the Conference Committee
of Senate Bill 1500 will readily show that coup detat was incorporated in the Revised
Penal Code in Article 134-A precisely to criminalize "mutiny" under Article 67 of the
Articles of War and to penalize the punitive act of mutiny, under the Articles of War as
coup detat. Article 67 of the Articles of War reads:
Art. 67. Mutiny or Sedition. Any person subject to military law who attempts to create
or who begins, excites, causes, or joins in any mutiny or sedition in any company,
party, post, camp, detachment, guard, or other command shall suffer death or such
other punishment as a court-martial may direct.
Without Article 134-A in the Revised Penal Code, the mutineers would be charged for
mutiny under Article 67 of the Articles of War:
Senator Lina. Yes, Mr. President.
Senator Enrile. Then we added Article 134-A which deals with the new crime of coup
detat.
Senator Enrile. and we defined how this newly characterized and defined crime
would be committed in Article 134-A?
Senator Lina. Yes, Mr. President.
Senator Enrile. And, in fact, we made a distinction between the penalty of the crimes
defined under Article 134 of the Revised Penal Code and the crime defined under
Article 134-A, is this correct, Mr. President?
Senator Lina. Yes, Mr. President.
The administration of military justice under the Articles of War has been exclusively
vested in courts-martial whether as General Courts-Martial, Special Courts-Martial or
Summary Courts-Martial. 15 Courts-martial pertain to the executive department and
are, in fact, simply instrumentalities of the executive power, provided by Congress for
the President as Commander-in-Chief to aid him in properly commanding the army
and navy, and enforcing discipline therein. 16
Senator Enrile. So that, for all intents and purposes, therefore, we are defining a new
crime under this proposed measure
Footnotes
People v. Hernandez, 99 Phil. 515, 536 (1956).
Id. at 541.
3
G.R. No. 93335, September 13, 1990, 189 SCRA 573, 580-581.
4
G.R. No. 95136, October 3, 1991, 202 SCRA 405, 416.
5
Supra note 1.
6
Supra note 3.
7
G.R. No. 92163, June 5, 1990, 186 SCRA 217.
8
Michigan v. Wagner, 77 N.W. 422.
9
Loving v. U.S., 517 U.S. 748, 778, 116 S.Ct. 1737 (1966).
10
Gloria, Philippine Military Law Annotated, p. 3.
11
Carter v. Roberto, 177 U.S. 497 (1900).
12
U.S. v. Weldon, 7 M.J. 938 (1979).
13
Parker v. Levy, 417 U.S. 733 (1974).
14
U.S. v. Taylor, 23 M.J. 341 (1987).
15
Article 3, Articles of War.
16
Supra note 14, p.17, citing Winthrop, Military Law and Precedents (2nd ed.), 49.
17
U.S. ex rel. Toth v. Quarles, 350 U.S. 11 (1955).
18
Orloff v. Willoughby, 345 U.S. 83 (1953)
1
2
G.R. No. 164007 LT. (SG) EUGENE GONZALES, LT. (SG) ANDY TORRATO, LT.
(SG) ANTONIO TRILLANES IV, CAPT. GARY ALEJANO, LT. (SG) JAMES LAYUG,
CPT. NICANOR FAELDON, LT. (SG) MANUEL COBOCHAN, ENS. ARMAND
PONTEJOS, LT. (JG) ARTURO PASCUA, and 1LT. JONHNEL SANGGALANG,
Petitioners, versus GEN. NARCISO ABAYA, in his capacity as Chief of Staff of the
Armed Forces of the Philippines, and B/GEN. MARIANO M. SARMIENTO, JR., in his
capacity as the Judge Advocate General of the Judge Advocate General Office
(JAGO), Respondents.
Promulgated:
August 10, 2006
rendering. For that reason alone, I agree that petitioners may stand civilian trial
for coup detat and court-martial for violation of Article 96.
Still, I acknowledge that I would have voted to grant the petition had petitioners faced
other charges, instead of the sole Article 96 charge, before the court-martial in
connection with the Oakwood mutiny. I submit that RA 7055 precisely authorizes the
civil court to independently determine whether the offense subject of the information
before it is actually service-connected. If the trial court does determine, before
arraignment, that the offense is service-connected, it follows that, as a rule, the
military court will not have jurisdiction over the acts constituting the offense.
Restatement of Relevant Facts
The following facts I consider relevant.
On 5 August 2003, just a little over a week after the so-called Oakwood mutiny, the
Department of Justice filed an Information with the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of
Makati against 321 military personnel, including petitioners, for violation of Article 134A of the Revised Penal Code which is the crime of coup detat. After the case was
docketed as Criminal Case No. 03-2784, the RTC directed the DOJ to conduct a
reinvestigation of the said case. On the same day that the order for re-investigation
was issued, the AFP Chief of Staff created a Pre-Trial Investigation Panel against the
same persons to determine the propriety of filing charges with a military tribunal
against petitioners, along with 300 or so other soldiers, for violation of the Articles of
War, again in connection with the Oakwood mutiny. Thus, 243 of the accused before
the RTC, including petitioners, filed a motion with the trial court praying that the court
assume jurisdiction over all the charges filed with the military tribunal, following RA
7055. 1
After re-investigation, the DOJ found probable cause for the crime of coup
detat against only 31 of the original 321 accused. The DOJ then filed a motion for
dismissal of the charge of coup detat against the 290 others, which motion was
granted by the RTC in an Order dated 14 November 2003. Petitioners were among
the 31 who still faced the charge of coup detat before the RTC.
Notwithstanding the dismissal of the charge of coup detat against the 290 soldiers,
they were still charged before the General Court Martial for violation of Articles 63, 64,
67, 96 and 97 of the Articles of War. 2 Among the charges faced by these soldiers was
for "mutiny," punishable under Article 63. Only those soldiers the charge of coup
detat against whom was dismissed were subjected to the charge of Articles of
War violations before the court-martial. Some of these 290 soldiers challenged the
jurisdiction of the court-martial in a petition for prohibition before this Court, which was
denied in Navales v. Abaya 3 in 2004.
On the other hand, on 9 December 2003, the Pre-Trial Investigation Panel
recommended that the 31 officers facing the charge of coup detat before the trial
court be excluded from the court-martial proceedings. The rationale that the Panel
offered was the assumption of civilian jurisdiction by the RTC based on RA 7055 and
its belief that the charges against the 31 it was investigating were absorbed by the
crime of coup detat, which was already within the jurisdiction of the RTC to try and
decide.
It was on 11 February 2004 that the RTC issued an Order (RTC Order) stating that "all
charges before the court-martial against the accused.. are hereby declared not
and criminal trials. I cannot agree to these general propositions, excepting when
the defendants happen to be charged before the court-martial for violation of
Article 96 of the Articles of War.
There are three fundamental questions that are consequently raised. First, can
Congress by law limit the jurisdiction of military tribunals and court-martials?
Second, does RA 7055 effectively deprive military courts jurisdiction over
violations of Articles of War 54 to 70, 72 to 92, and 95 to 97 if the civilian court
determines that the offenses charged do not constitute service-connected
offenses? And third, does it constitute double jeopardy if the same military
actor is tried and convicted before both civilian and military courts for the same
acts? I respectfully submit that all these questions should generally be
answered in the affirmative.
Jurisdictions of Courts-Martial In
the Philippines Fundamentally Statutory
I begin with the constitutional and statutory parameters of courts-martial in the
Philippines.
It is settled, in cases such as Ruffy v. Chief of Staff, 5 that court-martial proceedings
are executive in character, deriving as they do from the authority of the President as
the Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces. 6 Indeed, the authority of the President
to discipline members of the armed forces stands as one of the hallmarks of the
commander-in-chief powers. Obedience to the President and the chain-of-command
are integral to a professional and effective military, and the proper juridical philosophy
is to accede as much deference as possible to this prerogative of the President.
However, in Marcos v. Chief of Staff, 7 decided five (5) years after Ruffy, the Court
ruled that the word "court" as used in the Constitution included the General CourtMartial, citing Winthrops Military Law and Precedents, which noted that "courts-martial
are [in] the strictest sense courts of justice". 8 Indeed, it would be foolhardy to ignore,
with semantics as expedient, the adjudicative characteristics of courts-martial and
their ability to inflict punishment constituting deprivation of liberty, or even life. A courtmartial is still a court of law and justice, 9 although it is not a part of the judicial system
and judicial processes, but remains to be a specialized part of the over-all mechanism
by which military discipline is preserved. 10
Regardless of the accurate legal character of courts-martial, it should go without
saying that the authority of the President to discipline military personnel through that
process is still subject to a level of circumscription. Without such concession, the
President could very well impose such draconian measures of military punishment,
such as death by firing squad for overweight soldiers. The Court has indeed, on
occasion, recognized limitations and regulations over courts-martial. In Olaguer v.
Military Commission, 11 the Court reasserted that military tribunals cannot try and
exercise jurisdiction over civilians for as long as the civil courts are open and
functioning. 12 The authority of the Supreme Court to review decisions of the courtmartial was affirmed in Ognir v. Director of Prisons, 13 and should be recognized in
light of the judicial power of the Supreme Court under the 1987 Constitution, which
extends to determining grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of
jurisdiction on the part of any branch or instrumentality of the Government. And finally,
there are the series of rulings on the subject of double jeopardy, which I shall soon
discuss further.
Most strikingly, the "Articles of War" presently in use emanates not from executive fiat,
but from a law passed by the National Assembly known as Commonwealth Act No.
408. As such, the determination of what acts or offenses are punishable by courtmartial was in actuality made not by the President, but by the legislature. As such, the
Articles of War are utterly susceptible to legislative amendment, augmentation, or
even revocation.
I do not doubt that without an enabling law, the President would have the power to
impose court-martial proceedings under the aegis of the Commander-in-Chief clause.
Yet if there is an enabling law passed, such as Commonwealth Act No. 408, then the
President is bound to exercise the power to prescribe court-martial proceedings only
within the limits imposed by the law. These precepts should not preclude the President
from mandating other forms of military discipline, but if the choice is to subject the
soldier concerned to court-martial, then such proceedings should ensue within the
boundaries determined by the legislature under Commonwealth Act No. 408.
American jurisprudence is actually quite emphatic that the jurisdiction of a courtmartial is established by statute, and a court-martial has no jurisdiction beyond what is
given by statute. "[A] court-martial [is] a special statutory tribunal, with limited
powers." 14 To quote from Corpus Juris Secundum:
The jurisdiction of a court-martial is premised on an authorized convening
authority, court membership in accordance with the law, and power derived
from congressional act to try the person and the offense charged. [ 15 Thus, in
order for a court-martial to have jurisdiction, it must be convened and constituted in
accordance with law[ 16; and a court-martial has no jurisdiction beyond what is given it
by statute.[ 17 General court-martial jurisdiction is not restricted territorially to the limits
of a particular state or district.
The long continued practice of military authorities in exercising court-martial
jurisdiction may aid in the interpretation of statutes conferring such jurisdiction; but the
authority of a Secretary of an armed forces department to issue regulations
does not permit extension of the jurisdictions of courts-martial of the armed
force controlled by that department beyond the limits fixed by Congress[ 19
The language of statutes granting jurisdiction to courts-martial to try persons for
offenses must be construed to conform as near as may be to the constitutional
guarantees that protect the rights of citizens in general, it being assumed that
Congress intended to guard jealously against dilution of the liberties of citizens by the
enlargement of jurisdiction of military tribunals at the expense of the jurisdiction of the
civil courts. 20
Clearly then, while court-martial under military law may be sui generis, it is not supra
legem. The power to try by court-martial is established, defined and limited by statute,
even if it arises as a consequence of the power of the President as Commander-inChief.
What are the implications of these doctrines to the case at bar? To my mind, they
sufficiently establish that Congress does have the power to exclude certain acts from
the jurisdiction of the General Court-Martial. The same legislature that enacted
Commonwealth Act No. 408 is very well empowered to amend that law, as it has done
on occasion. 21 And I submit that Congress has done so with the enactment of RA
7055.
account the particular circumstances surrounding such acts. If the trial court
determines that the offense is indeed service-connected, finding for example that the
defendant had used his/her rank to assist the enemy, then it may rely on Article 82 in
its conclusion that the act is service-connected. If however, the actors being also a
soldier proved merely incidental and inconsequential to the assistance rendered to the
enemy, the civilian court could very well declare that the offense is not serviceconnected and thus subject to trial for treason before it.
The function devolved by the law on the trial court involves the determination of which
offenses are service-connected and which offenses are not. The power of
determination, however, is circumscribed by the law itself. By employing the phrase
"shall be limited to" and tying it with specifically enumerated Articles, the law precludes
the trial court from characterizing acts which fall under the Articles not so enumerated
as service-connected. Since Article 93 defining rape and Article 94 defining "various
crimes" are not included in the enumeration in RA 7055 it follows that the trial court is
devoid of authority to declare rape and "various crimes" as service-connected.
Again, the general purpose of RA 7055 is to deprive the court-martial of
jurisdiction to try cases which are properly cognizable before the civilian courts.
Hence, if a soldier is charged with violation of any of the articles other than those
referred to in Section 1, the court-martial is deprived of jurisdiction under RA 7055 if
such violation also constitutes a crime or offense under our penal laws. Section 1, by
citing those aforementioned articles, carves an exception to the general rule, yet at the
same time, qualifies this exception as subject to the determination of the trial court.
Hence, if the trial court so determines that the "service-connected" exception does not
apply, the general rule depriving the court-martial jurisdiction over the offense should
continue to operate.
It is worth mentioning that prior to RA 7055, Commonwealth Act No. 408 recognized
an exception to the rule that military persons are always subjected to court-martial in
lieu of civil trial. Article 94 stipulated that a person subject to military law who
committed a felony, crime, breach of law or violation of municipal ordinance
recognized as an offense of a penal nature was punishable by court-martial, provided
that such act was committed "inside a reservation of the [AFP]," or outside such
reservation when the offended party is a person subject to military law.35 The
implication, therefore, was that if such act described were committed outside a military
reservation, the civilian courts would have jurisdiction to try such offense. As the
official Manual for Courts-Martial of the AFP states, "[w]henever persons subject to
military law commit any of the offenses above stated outside Philippine Army
reservations, they fall under the exclusive jurisdiction of civil courts." 36
RA 7055 clearly expands this exception, by now mandating that even crimes
committed within military reservations fall within the jurisdiction of civil courts, the only
exception remaining is if it is determined by the civilian court that the offense is
actually service-connected. Significantly, Section 1 of RA 7055 did not include Article
94 as among the Articles of War which define service-connected offenses. 37 Evidently
the situs of the offense is not material as to whether the acts committed are serviceconnected offenses.
Admittedly, RA 7055 effectively curtails the ability of the military leadership to
discipline the soldiers under their command through the court-martial process. This is
accomplished though not by shielding errant soldiers from the criminal processes, but
instead through the opposite route, by entrusting to the civilian courts the authority
and sufficient discretion to impose substantive justice on such soldiers, conformably
with the constitutional principle of civilian supremacy over the military. It must be noted
that the acquisition of exclusive jurisdiction by the court-martial to try soldiers for acts
and when the Government chooses the tribunal in which to try an offender, when the
trial takes place in that tribunal, and when the accused is convicted and sentenced, he
can not again be put in jeopardy in another court of the same sovereignty. xxx It
follows that the defendant having been once in jeopardy can not be tried again for the
offense of which he was formerly convicted." 40 A similar situation obtained in U.S. v.
Tubig, 41 decided some months later, and a similar judgment of acquittal was
mandated by the Court on the ground of double jeopardy.
The doctrine has survived past the American occupation. In 1954, the Court was again
confronted with the issue whether a sentence passed by a military court barred further
prosecution of the same offense in a civilian court. The Court, in Crisologo v.
People, 42 squarely ruled that double jeopardy indeed barred such prosecution:
As we see it, the case hinges on whether the decision of the military court constitutes
a bar to further prosecution for the same offense in the civil courts.
The question is not of first impression in this jurisdiction. In the case of U. S. vs. Tubig,
3 Phil., 244, a soldier of the United States Army in the Philippines was charged in the
Court of First Instance of Pampanga with having assassinated one Antonio Alivia.
Upon arraignment, he pleaded double jeopardy in that he had already been previously
convicted and sentenced by a court-martial for the same offense and had already
served his sentence. The trial court overruled the plea on the grounds that as the
province where the offense was committed was under civil jurisdiction, the military
court had no jurisdiction to try the offense. But on appeal, this court held that "one who
has been tried and convicted by a court-martial under circumstances giving that
tribunal jurisdiction of the defendant and of the offense, has been once in jeopardy
and cannot for the same offense be again prosecuted in another court of the same
sovereignty." In a later case, Grafton vs. U. S. 11 Phil., 776, a private in the United
States Army in the Philippines was tried by a general court-martial for homicide under
the Articles of War. Having been acquitted in that court, he was prosecuted in the
Court of First Instance of Iloilo for murder under the general laws of the Philippines.
Invoking his previous acquittal in the military court, he pleaded it in bar of proceedings
against him in the civil court, but the latter court overruled the plea and after trial found
him guilty of homicide and sentenced him to prison. The sentence was affirmed by this
Supreme Court, but on appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States, the
sentence was reversed and defendant acquitted, that court holding that "defendant,
having been acquitted of the crime of homicide alleged to have been committed by
him by a court-martial of competent jurisdiction proceeding under the authority of the
United States, cannot be subsequently tried for the same offense in a civil court
exercising authority in the Philippines."
Double Jeopardy
There is another vital reason RA 7055 cannot be interpreted in such a way as to
permit both civilian and military trials of military personnel over the same act. Double
jeopardy would arise as a consequence if such an interpretation were foisted.
It is very well settled that double jeopardy attaches if one is tried by both a military
court and a civilian court over the same act, notwithstanding the differing natures of
both tribunals. The rule was pronounced by the Philippine Supreme Court as far back
as 1903, in U.S. v. Colley. 39 Therein, the defendant was sentenced to death by a
court-martial after murdering a fellow soldier, but the sentence could not be carried out
after the reviewing authority of the Army concluded that the military authorities were
without power to carry into execution the sentence. He then was charged with the
same offense before a civilian court. In ruling that the criminal case should be
dismissed, the Court ruled that the criminal trial was barred by double jeopardy. The
Court pronounced: "So here there is but one offense, that against the United States,
There is, for sure, a rule that where an act transgresses both civil and military law and
subjects the offender to punishment by both civil and military authority, a conviction or
an acquittal in a civil court cannot be pleaded as a bar to a prosecution in the military
court, and vice versa. But the rule "is strictly limited to the case of a single act which
infringes both the civil and the military law in such a manner as to constitute two
distinct offenses, one of which is within the cognizance of the military courts and the
other a subject of civil jurisdiction" (15 Am. Jur., 72), and it does not apply where both
courts derive their powers from the same sovereignty. (22 C. J. S., 449.) It therefore,
has no application to the present case where the military court that convicted the
petitioner and the civil court which proposes to try him again derive their powers from
one sovereignty and it is not disputed that the charges of treason tried in the courtmartial were punishable under the Articles of War, it being as a matter of fact impliedly
admitted by the Solicitor General that the two courts have concurrent jurisdiction over
the offense charged. 43
As noted earlier, Marcos, relying on Winthrops Military Law, pronounced that courtsmartial are still courts in constitutional contemplation. 44 At the same time, the Court
in Marcos pursued the logic of this thinking insofar as double jeopardy was concerned:
Besides, that a court-martial is a court, and the prosecution of an accused before it is
a criminal and not an administrative case, and therefore it would be, under certain
conditions, a bar to another prosecution of the defendant for the same offense,
because the latter would place the accused in double jeopardy, is shown by the
decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Grafton vs. United
States, 206 U. S. 333; 51 Law. Ed., 1088, 1092, in which the following was held:
"If a court-martial has jurisdiction to try an officer or soldier for a crime, its judgment
will be accorded the finality and conclusiveness as to the issues involved which attend
the judgments of a civil court in a case of which it may legally take cognizance; . . .
and restricting our decision to the above question of double jeopardy, we adjudge that,
consistently with the above act of 1902, and for the reasons stated, the plaintiff in
error, a soldier in the Army, having been acquitted of the crime of homicide, alleged to
have been committed by him in the Philippines, by a military court of competent
jurisdiction, proceeding under the authority of the United States, could not be
subsequently tried for the same offense in a civil court exercising authority in that
territory."
I am aware that following the Courts 1993 ruling in People v. Pineda, 45 double
jeopardy will not attach unless either the RTC or the court-martial passes sentence on
the petitioners. Yet even applying the Pineda doctrine, it is inevitable that, once either
tribunal renders judgment on the merits, double jeopardy would bar the further
prosecution by the court which was last in time to pronounce sentence, regardless
whether petitioners were convicted or acquitted. If both the RTC trial for coup
detat and the court-martial of the petitioners are allowed to proceed unhampered, the
strong likelihood arises that either one will be eventually mooted, no matter the stage,
should the other pronounce sentence.
This aspect is no longer material to my own disposition of the petition, yet I think it is
misplaced to apply the doctrine of absorption of crimes to the determination of serviceconnected offenses made by the civilian court pursuant to Section 1 of RA 7055. The
function of such determination by the trial court under RA 7055 is wholly different from
that utilized by the trial court in ascertaining whether crime A is absorbed by crime B in
the classic criminal law context. The latter is material to the trial court in reaching
conclusions as to which crimes may be considered against the accused and which
penalties may apply as to them. However, the purpose of the determination under RA
7055 is merely for establishing whether the acts for which the accused stand charged
before the courts-martial are indeed service-connected offenses cognizable
exclusively before the military courts, or non-service connected offenses cognizable
exclusively before the civilian courts. The determining factor is whether the act is
"service-connected," not whether one act is absorbed into the other.
The RTC may have been too loose in language when it utilized the word "absorbed,"
yet the word should not be appreciated in the context of absorption of crimes, as such
consideration is wholly irrelevant for purposes of Section 1. Instead, I think that the
pertinent conclusion of the RTC in its Order was that the acts charged before the
court-martial were not service-connected, as they were committed in furtherance of
the crime of coup detat. This, and not the notion of absorption of crimes, should be
the foundational basis for any attack of the RTC Order.
The Special Circumstance Surrounding Article of War 96
It is my general conclusion that if the civilian court makes a determination that the acts
for which the accused stands charged of, for violating those Articles of War referred to
in Section 1 of RA 7055, are not service-connected, then such determination, once
final, deprives the court-martial jurisdiction to try the offense. However, I submit that
Article of War 96 warrants special consideration, as it differs in character from the
other Articles of War referred to in Section 1 of RA 7055.
Article 96 of Commonwealth Act No. 408, as amended, reads:
Art. 96. Conduct Unbecoming an Officer and a Gentleman. Any officer, cadet, flying
cadet, or probationary second lieutenant, who is convicted of conduct unbecoming an
officer and a gentleman shall be dismissed from the service.
Justice Callejo, Sr. points out in his Concurring Opinion that "conduct unbecoming an
officer and a gentleman is a uniquely military offense," 47 and that "[t]he article
proscribing conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman has been held to be
wholly independent of other definitions of offenses xxx [and] is not subject to
preemption by other punitive articles." 48 It is difficult to dispute these conclusions,
which derive from American military case law. After all, "conduct unbecoming" pertains
to the unique exigencies of military life and discipline, whereby an officer is expected
to conform to an idiosyncratic etiquette not required of civilians.
Yet more pertinent to my position is the penalty prescribed by Article 96 for "conduct
unbecoming." The penalty is dismissal from service, a penalty which is administrative
in character, and beyond the jurisdiction of the civilian court to impose. Notably, of all
the Articles of War referred to in Section 1 of RA 7055, it is only Article 96 that
provides for dismissal from service as the exclusive penalty. All the other articles so
mentioned allow for the penalty of death, imprisonment, or a punishment "as a courtmartial may so direct" which could very well constitute any deprivation of life or liberty.
While these other articles prescribes a penalty which is penal in nature, it is only
Article 96 which provides for a penalty which is administrative in character.
I think in the end, respondents fully understood and applied the correct implications of
RA 7055 as it pertained to petitioners. Had respondents been aligned in thinking with
the majority, they would have been emboldened to charge petitioners with violations of
other Articles of War despite the RTC Order and the pendency of the coup detat case.
Petitioners could have very well been charged before the court-martial with violation of
Article 63, for mutiny, just as the 290 other participants in the "Oakwood mutiny."
Respondents however did not do so, respecting in fact the assumption of jurisdiction
by the civilian court over the crime of coup detat. Instead, respondents limited the
court-martial charge against petitioners for violation of Article 96, a punitive article
which is nonetheless wholly administrative in character and in penalty.
The majority unfortunately shows no similar prudence. Instead, it has opted to take the
path that leads to most resistance. With the decision today, there now stands a very
real danger tomorrow that persons standing criminal trial before the civil courts,
including the Sandiganbayan, who also happen to be facing charges before the courtmartial for violation of Articles 54 to 70, 72 to 92, 95 or 97, will move for the dismissal
of all their cases before the civilian courts. Assuming that there is integral relation
between the acts now cognizable under court-martial and the acts for which those
defendants face criminal trial, the trial courts will feel but little choice to dismiss those
charge, in light of the present majority ruling. Military justice was once supreme over
civilian justice. We should not go down that way again. Too many ghosts haunt that
road.
I vote to dismiss the petition, for the reason discussed above. Insofar as the majority
ruling deviates from the views I stated herein, I respectfully dissent.
DANTE O. TINGA
Associate Justice
Footnotes
1
general the rules of evidence as adopted in the civil courts. As a court of justice, it is
required, by the terms of its statutory oath, to adjudicate between the Philippines and
the accused "without partiality, favor, or affection," and according, not only to the laws
and customs of the service, but to its "conscience, i.e., its sense of substantial right
and justice unaffected by technicalities. In the strictest sense courts-martial are courts
of justice."
10
Magno v. de Villa, G.R. No. 92606, 26 July 1991, 199 SCRA 663, 673, citing Chief
Justice Teehankee in Vargas v. RADM Kilcline, et al.
11
GR. Nos. L-54558 & L-69882, 22 May 1987, 150 SCRA 144.
12
Id. at 165.
13
80 Phil. 401 (1948).
14
Collins v. McDonald, 258 US 416, 417.
15
NCMR - U.S. v. Moody, 10 M.J. 845.
16
ACMR U.S. v. Wilson, 27 M.J. 555.
17
In re Wilson, D.C.Va., 33 F.2d 214.
18
U.S. ex rel. Hirshberg v. Cooke, N.Y., 69 S.Ct. 530, 336 U.S. 210, 93 L.Ed. 621.
19
U.S. ex rel. Flannery v. Commanding General, Second Service Command, D.C.N.Y.,
69 F.Supp. 661.
20
57 C.J.S. Military Justice 156. Emphasis supplied.
21
Com. Act No. 408 has been amended by Rep. Act No. 242 (1948) and Rep. Act No.
516 (1950).
22
Emphasis supplied.
23
See Constitution, Art. II, Section 3.
24
Record of the Senate, 9 May 1990, p. 671.
25
395 U.S. 298 (1969).
26
See also Gosa v. Mayden, 413 U.S. 665, 672 (1973). OCallahan in turn was
reversed by the U.S. Supreme Court in its 1987 ruling in Solorio v. U.S., 483 U.S. 435,
which reiterated the previous doctrine that the proper exercise of court-martial
jurisdiction over an offense hinged on one factor: the military status of the accused.
Solorio v. U.S., id. at 450-451. Still, it would be foolhardy to apply any persuasive value
to the Solorio ruling to the present petition. The Court in Solorio whole-heartedly
embraced the principle that it was the U.S. Congress that possessed "the authority to
regulate the conduct of persons who are actually members of the armed services", id.,
at 441. The U.S. Supreme Court also acknowledged that "Congress has primary
responsibility for the delicate task of balancing the rights of servicemen against the
needs of the military. As [the U.S. Supreme Court] recently reiterated, judicial
deference is at its apogee when legislative action under the congressional authority
to raise and support armies and make rules and regulations for their governance is
challenged." Id., at 447, citing Goldman v. Weinberger, 475 U.S. 503, 508 (1986).
There was no American statute that prescribed the "service-connected" standard, even
at the time OCallahan was decided, the latter decision predicated instead on the Fifth
and Six Amendments in the Bill of Rights. In the Philippine setting, "service-connected"
is a standard duly legislated and enacted by Congress under Rep. Act No. 7055. My
views in this Opinion are thus conformable even to the Solorio decision.
27
Section 1, Rep. Act No. 7055. Emphasis supplied.
28
Concurring Opinion, J. Carpio, infra.
29
See Article 95, Com. Act No. 408, as amended.
30
Id.
31
"The words a design, a determination, to kill, distinctly formed in the mind in an
instruction, imply deliberation. xxx The word determination in this instruction is not
used in any technical sense; in fact, it has no technical sense in which it means less
than it does in popular signification. Webster defines it to be a decision of a question in
the mind; firm resolution; settled purpose. Can it be said that a question can be
decided, a wavering resolution made firm, or a hesitating purpose settled without
deliberation?" 12 Words and Phrases (1954 ed.), p. 478-479; citing State v. Ah Mook,
12 Nev. 369, 390.
32
1 Bouviers Law Dictionary (8th ed., 1914), p. 858.
33
G.R. No. L-59603, 29 April 1987, 149 SCRA 305.
34
Id. at 316. Justice Vicente Mendozas declaration in Iglesia Ni Cristo v. Court of
Appeals, 328 Phil. 893 (1996), is worth mentioning. "Indeed, I cannot understand why,
after ruling that the valuation of property in eminent domain is essentially a judicial
function which cannot be vested in administrative agencies, this Court should be willing
to leave the valuation of that priceless commodity expression, whether by means of
motion picture or television to administrative agencies with only occasional review
by the courts. The trend may be toward greater delegation of judicial authority to
administrative agencies in matters requiring technical knowledge and as a means of
relieving courts of cases which such agencies can very well attend to. There is no
justification, however, for such delegation in the area of our essential freedoms,
particularly freedom of expression, where "only a judicial determination in an adversary
proceeding [can] ensure the necessary sensitivity to freedom of expression." Id. at 962,
J. Mendoza, Separate Opinion.
35
This proviso was enacted as an amendment to Com. Act No. 408 by Rep. Act No.
242 in 1948.
36
A Manual for Courts-Martial: Armed Forces of the Philippines, p. 181.
37
See note 27.
38
Record of the Senate, 21 May 1990, p. 840.
39
3 Phil. 58 (1903).
40
Id. at 66.
41
3 Phil.244 (1904).
42
94 Phil. 477 (1954).
43
Id. at 479-480.
44
Supra note 9.
45
G.R. No. 44205, 16 February 1993, 219 SCRA 1.
46
G.R. 95136, 3 October 1991, 202 SCRA 405.
47
Concurring Opinion of Justice Callejo, Sr., infra; citing U.S. v. Weldon, 7 M.J. 938
(1979).
48
Id. citing U.S. v. Taylor, 23 M.J. 341 (1987).
49
"The provisions of both the Civil Code and the Rules of Court regarding the
relationship between the criminal and civil liabilities of an accused do not contemplate
administrative actions against government officers and employees. While there may be
specific statutes making criminal guilt indispensable to the dismissal or any other form
of administrative punishment for certain public employees, and there have been
instances when the court itself did order reinstatement as a consequence of absolute
acquittal, as a rule xxx the administrative determination as to an employees dismissal
or punishment in any other way is not predicated in any respect on the result of
corresponding criminal proceedings." Rice and Corn Administration v. Silao, G.R. No.
L-25294, 21 August 1980, 99 SCRA 200, 207-208. "[T]he criminal action is separate
and distinct from the administrative case. And, if only for that reason, so is
administrative liability separate and distinct from penal liability. Hence, probation only
affects the criminal aspect of the case, not its administrative dimension." Samalio v.
Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 140079, 31 March 2005, 454 SCRA 462, 475.
B. Explosives
Three (3) pieces fragmentation hand
grenades without first securing the necessary
license or permit thereof from a competent
government authority.
Baylosis, de Vera, and Palo, filed a motion to quash the information on the following
grounds, viz.:
I. THE FACTS CHARGED DO NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFENSE
BECAUSE THEY ARE FOUNDED ON AN
UNCONSTITUTIONAL/REPEALED STATUTE.
B. FOR THE SAME REASONS, THIS HONORABLE COURT IS
DEVOID OF JURISDICTION TO TRY THIS CASE.
After receiving the parties' arguments on the matter, the Trial Court denied the motion
to quash, by an extended Resolution dated April 24, 1990. A motion for
reconsideration filed by Baylosis, et al. was also denied in an Order dated July 12,
1990.
Baylosis and de Vera thereupon instituted the present action in this Court. Here, they
plead for the nullification and setting aside of the Trial Judge's Orders of April 24, 1990
and July 12, 1990; the dismissal of Criminal Case No. 72705 or, alternatively, that the
information therein be considered as charging only simple rebellion; and that the
public officials impleaded as respondents the Rizal Public Prosecutor, the Secretary
of Justice, the Secretary of National Defense, the Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of
the Philippines, and the Special Military Prosecutor be "restrained from further
initiating, filing or prosecuting cases involving common crimes against the petitioners."
What the petitioners advocate at bottom is that a doctrine laid down by jurisprudence
or case law is superior to a statute afterwards enacted by legislative authority; that
decisions construing certain specific provisions of one law are sufficient basis for a
declaration of the unconstitutionality of a subsequently enacted law. More specifically,
they contend that the rulings in People vs. Amado Hernandez 5 (reiterated in some
ten other subsequent rulings), Enrile vs. Salazar,6 and Enrile vs. Amin 7 to the
effect that the felony of rebellion defined and penalized in the Revised Penal Code
cannot, in accordance with Article 48 of the same Code, be complexed with the
offense of murder, homicide, arson, or other crimes committed in connection with, or
on the occasion or in furtherance of, rebellion render invalid, as unconstitutional,
Section 1 (3) of Presidential Decree No. 1866, as amended.
The petitioners further posit the unconstitutionality of the challenged provision
because "repugnant to the provisions of the 1987 Constitution, which guarantee full
respect for human rights, equal protection of the laws, due process, right to bail,
protection against double jeopardy and from cruel, degrading or inhuman punishment,
and supremacy of civilian authority over the military."
A. Firearms/Ammunition
One (1) AK 47 Automatic Rifle with
M22N006726 with magazine and 9 rounds.
PD 1866 was enacted on June 29, 1983 8 by the late President Marcos in the
exercise of his legislative powers under the 1973 Constitution, with the avowed
purpose, indicated in its title, to codify "the laws on illegal/unlawful possession,
manufacture, dealing in, acquisition or disposition, of firearms, ammunition or
explosives or instruments used in the manufacture of firearms, ammunition or
explosives; and disposing stiffer penalties for certain violations thereof and for relevant
purposes." The section (numbered 1) containing the allegedly unconstitutional
provision 9 reads as follows:
Section 1. Unlawful Manufacture, Sale, Acquisition, Disposition or
Possession of Firearms or Ammunition or Instruments Used or
Intended to be Used in the Manufacture of Firearms or
Ammunition. The penalty of reclusion temporal in its maximum
period to reclusion perpetua shall be imposed upon any person
who shall unlawfully manufacture, deal in, acquire, dispose, or
possess any firearm, part of firearm, ammunition or machinery,
tool or instrument used or intended to be used in the manufacture
of any firearm or ammunition.
If homicide or murder is committed with the use of an unlicensed
firearm, the penalty of death shall be imposed.
If the violation of this Section is in furtherance of, or incident to, or
in connection with the crimes of rebellion, insurrection or
subversion, the penalty of death shall be imposed.
The penalty reclusion temporal in its maximum period to reclusion
perpetua shall be imposed upon the owner, president, manager,
director or other responsible officer of any public or private firm,
company, corporation or entity, who shall wilfully or knowingly
allow any of the firearms owned by such firm, company,
corporation or entity to be used by any person found guilty of
violating the provisions of the preceding paragraphs.
The penalty of prision mayor shall be imposed upon any person
who shall carry any licensed firearm outside his residence without
legal authority therefor.
It is worthy of note that under this section
1) simple possession of firearm without license or lawful authority (or unlawful
manufacture, dealing in, acquisition, or disposal of any firearm, part of firearm,
ammunition or machinery, tool or instrument used or intended to be used in the
manufacture of any firearm or ammunition), without more, is punished by reclusion
temporal maximum to reclusion perpetua a penalty that, to be sure, is heavier
than prision mayor, which is the penalty prescribed for rebellion or insurrection by
Article 135 of the Revised Penal Code;
2) indeed, even if the firearm be licensed but is brought by the possessor outside of
his residence without authority, the penalty imposed for the act is prision mayor, the
same sanction as for rebellion;
3) the penalty is however increased to death (now reclusion perpetua) 10 if
a) the unlicensed firearm is used in the commission of murder or
homicide, or
constitutional scheme of things in this country. It is a theory which has never been and
should never be sanctioned by this Court. It is a proposition that is not in essence
defensible, specially in the context of contemporary events. 13
The petitioners further theorize that Section 1 (3) of PD 1866 is invalid because it
gives the public prosecutor an option not to file a case for rebellion and instead file as
many crimes for murder, frustrated murder, etc. as might have been perpetrated in
furtherance of, or incident to, or in connection with rebellion, insurrection or
subversion. The argument is not tenable. The fact is that the Revised Penal Code
treats rebellion or insurrection as a crime distinct from murder, homicide, arson, or
other felonies that might conceivably be committed in the course of a rebellion. It is
the Code, therefore, in relation to the evidence in the hands of the public prosecutor,
and not the latter's whim or caprice, which gives the choice. The Code allows, for
example, separate prosecutions for eithermurder or rebellion, although not
for both where the indictment alleges that the former has been committed in
furtherance of or in connection with the latter. Surely, whether people are killed or
injured in connection with a rebellion, or not, the deaths or injuries of the victims are
no less real, and the grief of the victims' families no less poignant.
Moreover, it certainly is within the power of the legislature to determine what acts or
omissions other than those set out in the Revised Penal Code or other existing
statutes are to be condemned as separate, individual crimes and what penalties
should be attached thereto. The power is not diluted or improperly wielded simply
because at some prior time the act or omission was but an element or ingredient of
another offense, or might usually have been connected with another crime.
The interdict laid in Hernandez, Enrile and the other cases cited is against attempts to
complex rebellion with the so called "common" crimes committed in furtherance, or in
the course, thereof; this, on the authority alone of the first sentence of Article 48 of the
Revised Penal Code. Stated otherwise, the ratio of said cases is that Article 48 cannot
be invoked as the basis for charging and prosecuting the complex crime of rebellion
with murder, etc., for the purpose of obtaining imposition of the penalty for the more
serious offense in its maximum period (in accordance with said Art. 48). Said cases
did not indeed they could not and were never meant to proscribe the legislative
authority from validly enacting statutes that would define and punish, as offenses sui
generis crimes which, in the context of Hernandez, et al. may be viewed as a complex
of rebellion with other offenses. There is no constitutional prohibition against this, and
the Court never said there was. What the Court stated in said cases about rebellion
"absorbing" common crimes committed in its course or furtherance must be viewed in
light of the fact that at the time they were decided, there were no penal provisions
defining and punishing, as specific offenses, crimes like murder, etc. committed in the
course of as part of a rebellion. This is no longer true, as far as the present case is
concerned, and there being no question that PD 1866 was a valid exercise of the
former President's legislative powers. Thus, Misolas, 14 to the effect that charging the
qualified offense of illegal possession of firearms under PD 1866 does not charge the
complex crime of subversion with illegal possession of firearms, and hence does not
run counter to Hernandez, et al., is good and correct rule and is applicable here.
In Enrile vs. Salazar, the Court intimated that the remedy against the perceived
lightness of the penalty for rebellion was not to be sought from the courts, but by
legislation. It may not unreasonably be supposed that the purpose of PD 1866
appears to be precisely to remedy that perceived lenity of the penalty prescribed by
the Revised Penal Code for rebellion or insurrection and the legal impossibility,
pronounced by this Court of complexing that felony with other crimes punished by
higher penalties in accordance with Article 48 of the same Code.
their prosecution and the subsequent enactment of RA 6968 did not retroactively
validate it.
My vote is to grant the petition. So did I vote in Misolas.
Gutierrez, Jr., J., dissent.
# Separate Opinions
SARMIENTO, J., dissenting:
I dissent. I would like to point out that I was originally assigned to write the opinion for
the majority in Misolas vs. Panga, 1 My opinion sought to strike down Presidential
Decree No. 1866 for three reasons: (1) it is a bill of attainder because it presumes the
accused to be guilty, as well, of the crime of subversion, in addition to "illegal
possession;" (2) it is vague; and (3) it violates the rule against double jeopardy. I take
the liberty in restating that opinion, as I originally wrote it:
The petitioner, a detained prisoner, prays that the Court declare
"the third paragraph of Section 1 of Presidential Decree No.
1866" 1 unconstitutional in this petition for certiorari.
The petitioner was apprehended by elements of the Philippine
Constabulary (244th PC Company) on August 8, 1987, at Forest
Village, Barangay Tagbobog, Pili, Camarines Sur. He was
arrested along with two others, Identified only as Ka Donna and
Ka Menchie, following "information" 2 reaching the PC
headquarters at Naga City that three "subversive
terrorists" 3 were sojourning at an "underground house" 4 at
Forest Village. On further information submitted by
"neighbors", 5 that "the real owner (of the house) is in
Binanauanan, Pili and that the occupants ... were
strangers," 6 the Constabulary through a raiding team, led a
search of the house. Their account is as follows: "We searched
the house and found among their personal belongings,
voluminous subversive documents and one gauge shotgun,
commonly as 'sumpak' with serial number 221534 and four (4)
live ammos for the same firearm." 7 It was added that "we found
inside three persons one (1) male and two (2) female but the two
female [sic] escaped." 8 Thereafter, the petitioner was brought to
Naga City for questioning.
On August 10, 1987, the Constabulary filed a complaint with the
Provincial Fiscal. On September 4, 1987, or twenty-six days after
the petitioner's arrest without a warrant, the Fiscal filed the
corresponding information, for violation of the third paragraph, of
Section 1, of Presidential Decree No. 1866. But it was only on
September 11, 1987, or more than one month after his
warrantless apprehension, that a warrant was issued, and bail for
his provisional liberty fixed, in the sum of P170,000.00. No bail
apparently has been posted up to now because he cannot afford
it. As a matter of fact, the petitioner is represented by a counsel
de oficio and has been allowed by the Court to litigate as a
pauper.
I would like to add, insofar as the majority in this case adverts to the "Hernandez
doctrine," that Presidential Decree No. 1866 is, moreover, an invalid exercise of
judicial power, and is therefore offensive to the principle of separation of powers
prescribed by the Constitution. In People vs. Hernandez, 3 the Court held that
common crimes such as illegal possession of firearms are simple ingredients of
the primary offense (rebellion, subversion, etc.), for which separate prosecutions are
not possible. The Court has spoken. The legislature can not reinterpret the law by
making mere ingredients of an offense punishable separately. Interpretation of the law
is the sole domain of the Court.
As I said, Presidential Decree No. 1866 is one of the last vestiges of authoritarian rule
in the country, whereby the State pounced on its opponents under rules that offered
no sporting chance or hope to the State's opponents. Democracy has however, been
restored, in which the State is called upon to lean favorably toward its opponents (i.e.,
through favorable penal laws and presumption of innocence). It is time to wipe the
Decree out of our statute books.
Regalado, J., I join Justice Sarmiento in his dissent.
CRUZ, J., dissenting:
If the petitioners are convicted of rebellion under the Revised Penal code and found to
have used an illegally possessed firearm in connection therewith, they will be subject
to the penalty of only prision mayor. The illegal possession of firearms is absorbed in
the crime of rebellion and may not be separately punished.
On the other hand, if they are convicted of illegal possession of firearms in connection
with the crime of rebellion under P.D. 1866, they will be subject to the extreme penalty
of reclusion perpetua (reduced from death). Conviction of the illegal possession
carries with it a finding that the accused was engaged in rebellion.
I am unable to understand the obvious disparity. In both instances, two circumstances
are established, to wit, rebellion and illegal possession of firearms. Yet the first offense
is punished only with prision mayor but the second is punished with reclusion
perpetua.
Mention has been made of RA 6968 which now imposes for simple rebellion under
Articles 134 and 135 of the Revised Penal Code the same penalty for violation of Sec.
1(3) of Sec. 3(3) of PD 1866. The subsequent passage of the amendatory law in 1990
does not, of course, affect the petitioners in the case at bar because the offense
imputed to them were supposedly committed in 1988. Such amendment may have
corrected the injustice inherent in the aforestated provisions of PD 1866, which is thus
now relieved of its constitutional infirmity. However, the decree may still not be applied
to the herein petitioners as it was unconstitutional at the time it was made the basis for
their prosecution and the subsequent enactment of RA 6968 did not retroactively
validate it.
My vote is to grant the petition. So did I vote in Misolas.
Gutierrez, Jr., J., dissent.
In the cases before us, the law takes an ambivalent position toward the crime of illegal
possession of firearms when committed in connection with rebellion. As the basic
offense under PD 1866, it is considered a serious offense and penalized with no less
than reclusion perpetua. However, as a mere attendant circumstance in committing
rebellion under the Revised Penal Code, it is not even separately punished, being
deemed absorbed in the main offense.
It seems to me that if it is the intention of the legislature to consider a particular crime
a serious offense deserving a heavy penalty, it should be consistent in the application
of such penalty. It cannot punish the offense heavily in one case and practically
condone it in another case.
One might say that this involves a question of policy or wisdom that is resoluble only
by Congress and not by this Court. That may be so, again as a general rule, but not
where considerations of due process and equal protection are involved.
Under the laws as they stood when the petitioners were formally indicted, the
prosecuting officer was given the choice of the offense he could charge, depending on
his discretion, which could in turn depend on his attitude toward the suspect. This
circumstance gave a dangerous power to the government to discriminate in the
prosecution of persons charged with practically the same offense, treating some of
them severely and the others with benign leniency.
It has been held that although a law may be fair and impartial on its face, it must
nevertheless be annulled if it gives the administrative officer the discretion to enforce it
with "an evil eye and an uneven hand" (Yick Wo vs. Hopkins, 118 U.S. 356; People vs.
Vera, 65 Phil. 56). That is exactly what PD 1866 empowered the prosecuting officer to
do. In fact, at the hearing of this case before this Court, the government counsel
frankly admitted that the petitioners were prosecuted under the decree because it
prescribed the heavier penalty although they could also have been prosecuted for
rebellion under the Revised Penal Code.
# Footnotes
NARVASA, J.:
1 The penalty of death was originally imposed by the law, but upon
effectivity of the 1987 Constitution was deemed ipso facto reduced
to reclusion perpetua in view of the proscription (in Sec. 19, ART. III of said
Constitution) of the imposition of the death penalty.
2 Or "part firearm, ammunition or machinery, tool or instrument used or
intended to be used in the manufacture of any firearm or ammunition."
3 181 SCRA 648, verdict arrived at by a vote of 12 to 3;
Cortes, J., ponente.
4 Annex C, petition.
5 99 Phil. 515 (1956).
6 186 SCRA 217 (1990).
7 G.R. No. 93375, Sept. 13, 1990.
8 With effect "after fifteen (15) days following the completion of its
publication in the Official Gazette" (Sec. 10).
9 Indicated by emphasis and underscoring in the reproduced section; see
footnotes 1 and 2, supra.
10 SEE footnote 1, supra.
11 Sec. 3.
12 Misolas vs. Panga, 181 SCRA 648 (1990).
13 In Enrile vs. Salazar, 186 SCRA 217, 233, a similar observation was
made: "It may be that in the light of contemporary events, the act of
rebellion has lost that quintessentially quixotic quality that justifies the
relative leniency with which it is regarded and punished by law, that
present-day rebels are less impelled by love of country than by lust for
power and have become no better than mere terrorists to whom nothing,
not even the sanctity of human life, is allowed to stand in the way of their
ambitions. Nothing so underscores this aberration as the rash of seemingly
senseless killings, bombings, kidnappings and assorted mayhem so much
in the news these days, as often perpetrated against innocent civilians as
against the military, but by and large attributable to, or even claimed by socalled rebels to be part of, an ongoing revolution."
14 Id.
15 SEE 10A, Words and Phrases, Perm. Ed., pp. 307, 311, 315-316.
16 Cruz, I.A., Constitutional Law, 1985 ed., p. 304.
17 Op. cit., pp. 304-305.
18 Or of hand-grenade(s), rifle grenade(s), and other explosives, including
but not limited to "philbox bombs (sic)," "molotov cocktail bomb,"
"firebombs," or other incendiary devices capable of producing destructive
effect on contiguous objects or causing injury or death to any person.
19 SEE footnotes 1 and 10, supra.
20 Secs. 2 and 6 Rule 110, Rules of Court, as amended.
21 Guiao vs. Figueroa, 94 Phil. 1018, 1021-1023 (1954); de Castro, Jr. vs.
Castaeda, 1 SCRA 1131, 1134-1135 (1961), both cited in Jacinto,
G.V., Criminal Procedure, 1979 ed., p. 8.
SARMIENTO, J.:
1 G.R. No. 83341, January 30, 1990, 181 SCRA 648, 663-668.
2 Footnotes omitted.
3 99 Phil. 515 (1956), and several cases that affirmed it. See Decision, 2,
fn. 3.
SECOND DIVISION
[G.R. No. 106922. April 20, 2001.]
FRANKLIN M. DRILON, AURELIO C. TRAMPE, FERDINAND R.
ABESAMIS and EULOGIO MANANQUIL, Petitioners, v. COURT OF
APPEALS, HON. ERIBERTO U. ROSARIO, JR., in his capacity as
Presiding Judge of Branch 66, Regional Trial Court of Makati and
JUAN PONCE ENRILE, Respondents.
DECISION
Team of Prosecutors likewise filed before the Regional Trial Court of Makati
City an Information charging, among others, private respondent with the
offense of obstruction of justice for harboring an alleged felon under
Presidential Decree No. 1829. Private respondent was later arrested and
detained overnight at the NBI headquarters in Taft Avenue, Manila, and, on
the following day, transferred to a detention room at Camp Karingal in
Quezon City. The lawyers of private respondent also discovered that the
information against the latter was first filed on February 21, 1990, but was
subsequently withdrawn for re-filing on February 27, 1990. After a petition
for writ of habeas corpus was filed before this Court entitled Enrile v.
Salazar 5 , we granted private respondents provisional liberty upon posting
of a cash bond.chanrob1es virtua1 1aw 1ibrary
On June 5, 1990, in the same case of Enrile v. Salazar, we ordered the
modification of the Information before the RTC of Quezon City to simple
rebellion only in consonance with our ruling in People v. Hernandez 6 . On
September 13, 1990, in Enrile v. Amin, 7 this Court ruled that the filing of
a separate information for obstruction of justice also violated the
Hernandez doctrine and accordingly ordered the quashal of the said
information.
As a consequence of our said Order dated September 13, 1990, private
respondent on August 20, 1990 filed a Complaint for damages, docketed as
Civil Case No. 90-2327, before the Regional Trial Court of Makati City while
the rebellion case was still pending litigation. Private respondents
complaint impleaded as defendants herein petitioners, then Solicitor
General Francisco Chavez and Judge Jaime Salazar. The complaint basically
accuses the petitioners of bad faith in filing the information for rebellion
complexed with murder and frustrated murder. Thus, the complaint
alleges:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
2.5 The so-called "preliminary investigation" of the charge against plaintiff
was railroaded from the very start. Plaintiffs pleas and motions asking for
strict compliance with the rules of procedure and the norms of fairness and
justice were either ignored or summarily denied by the investigating panel.
Plaintiff, in utter frustration, filed a petition for summary dismissal of the
charge and, anticipating the denial of that as well, also filed an urgent
motion to be given at least five (5) days notice to enable him to take the
appropriate legal action, before the filing of any information against him.
x
3.1 All of the defendants, in and by all their actuation in connection with
the information for rebellion "complexed." . . individually, collectively, and
with unity of purposes and intentions, illegally and unjustly caused,
directed and prolonged plaintiffs arrest and detention without bail, through
the expediency of disregarding the Hernandez doctrine prohibiting the
complexing of rebellion with other crimes.chanrob1es virtua1 1aw 1ibrary
In and by all their aforementioned actuation, all of the defendants
individually, collectively and with unity of purposes and intentions
(a) wilfully, manifestly and maliciously obstructed, defeated, violated,
impeded and impaired plaintiffs constitutional and legal right to due
14. The malicious prosecution, nay persecution, of plaintiff for a nonexistent crime had severely injured and besmirched plaintiffs name and
reputation and forever stigmatized his stature as a public figure, thereby
causing him extreme physical suffering, serious anxiety, mental anguish,
moral shock and social humiliation." chanrob1es virtua1 1aw 1ibrary
is a mere conclusion of law and is not an averment or allegation of ultimate
facts. It does not, therefore, aid in any wise the complaint in setting forth a
valid cause of action against the petitioners.
The allegations of bad faith and malice in the complaint are based on the
ground that the petitioners knowingly and allegedly maliciously filed the
information for an offense that does not exist in the statute books. But as
we have ruled in Drilon:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
In the case under consideration, the decision of the Special Team of
Prosecutors to file the information for rebellion with murder and frustrated
murder against respondent Adaza, among others, cannot be dismissed as
the mere product of whim or caprice on the part of the prosecutors who
conducted the preliminary investigation. . . . While it is true that the
petitioners were fully aware of the prevailing jurisprudence enunciated in
People v. Hernandez, which proscribes the complexing of murder and other
commission crimes with rebellion, petitioners were of the honest conviction
that the Hernandez Case can be differentiated from the present case. The
petitioners thus argued:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph
"Of course we are aware of the ruling in People v. Hernandez, 99 Phil. 515,
which held that common crimes like murder, arson, etc., are absorbed by
rebellion. However, the Hernandez case is different from the present case
before us. In the Hernandez case, the common crimes of murder, arson,
etc. were found by the fiscal to have been committed as a necessary
means to commit rebellion, or in furtherance thereof. Thus, the fiscal filed
an information for rebellion alleging those common crimes as a necessary
means of committing the offense charged under the second part of Article
48, RPC.
We, however, find no occasion to apply the Hernandez ruling since as
intimated above, the crimes of murder and frustrated murder in this case
were absolutely unnecessary to commit rebellion although they were the
natural consequences of the unlawful bombing. Hence, the applicable
provision is the first part of Article 48 of the RPC."cralaw virtua1aw library
While the Supreme Court in the case of Enrile v. Salazar, addressing the
issue of whether or not the Hernandez doctrine is still good law, in a 10-3
vote, did not sustain the position espoused by the herein petitioners on the
matter, three justices felt the need to re-study the Hernandez ruling in light
of present-day developments, among whom was then Chief Justice Marcelo
Fernan. . .
x
Apparently, not even the Supreme Court then was of one mind in
debunking the theory being advanced by the petitioners in this case, some
of whom were also the petitioners in the Enrile case.chanrob1es virtua1
1aw 1ibrary
x
A doubtful or difficult question of law may become the basis of good faith
and, in this regard, the law always accords to public officials the
presumption of good faith and regularity in the performance of official
duties. [Tatad v. Garcia, Jr., 243 SCRA 436, 463 (1995)] Any person who
seeks to establish otherwise has the burden of proving bad faith or illmotive. Here, since the petitioners were of the honest conviction that there
was probable cause to hold respondent Adaza for trial for the crime of
rebellion with murder and frustrated murder, and since Adaza himself,
through counsel, did not allege in his complaint lack of probable cause, we
find that the petitioners cannot be held liable for malicious prosecution.
Needless to say, probable cause was not wanting in the institution of
Criminal Case No. Q-90-11855 against Adaza.
As to the requirement that the prosecutor must be impelled by malice in
bringing the unfounded action, suffice it to state that the presence of
probable cause signifies, as a legal consequence, the absence of malice.
(Albenson Enterprises Corp., supra.) At the risk of being repetitious, it is
evident in this case that petitioners were not motivated by malicious intent
or by a sinister design to unduly harass private respondent, but only by a
well-founded belief that respondent Adaza can be held for trial for the
crime alleged in the information.
All told, the complaint, dated July 11, 1990, filed by Adaza before Branch
100 of the Regional Trial Court against the petitioners does not allege facts
sufficient to constitute a cause of action for malicious prosecution. . . .
x
malicious prosecution, that is, he was denied by the petitioners the right to
be notified before the criminal information against him, his complaint
alleges that:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
x
However, we hold that the said allegations still fail to maintain a cause of
action against the petitioners. To reiterate, a cause of action exists if the
following elements are present: (1) a right in favor of the plaintiff by
whatever means and under whatever law it arises or is created; (2) an
obligation on the part of the named defendant to respect or not to violate
such right; and (3) an act or omission on the part of such defendant
violative of the right of the plaintiff or constituting a breach of the
obligation of defendant to the plaintiff for which the latter may maintain an
action for recovery of damages. 29 In the case at bar, we fail to see any
right of the private respondent supposedly violated by the petitioners.
Nowhere in the statute books is a prospective accused given the right to be
notified beforehand of the filing of an information against him. Likewise,
the withdrawal of the information and the subsequent re-filing of the same
do not constitute an actionable wrong inasmuch as the filing or re-filing of
an information lies within the discretion of the prosecutor who must act
independently of the affected parties.
Private respondent claims that an appeal or an original action
for certiorari is not the proper remedy for a defendant whose motion to
dismiss has been denied by the trial court for the reason that the order
does not terminate the proceedings, nor finally dispose of the contentions
of the parties. In its decision affirming the trial courts denial of the motion
to dismiss, the appellate court sustained this contention. However, as
correctly pointed out by the petitioners, the rule admits of an exception.
Thus, where the denial of the motion to dismiss by the trial court was
tainted with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of
jurisdiction, as in the case at bar, the aggrieved party may assail the order
of denial on certiorari. 30 A wide breadth of discretion is granted
24. Id., citing Albenson Enterprises Corp. v. Court of Appeals, 217 SCRA 16, 28
(1993); Ponce v. Legaspi, 208 SCRA 377, 388 (1992); 199 SCRA 63, 68-70 (1991).
26. Supra, note 21, p. 222 citing Albenson Enterprises Corp. v. Court of Appeals, 217
SCRA 16, 28 (1993); Que v. Intermediate Appellate Court, 169 SCRA 137 (1989).
19. San Lorenzo Village Association, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, 288 SCRA 115, 126
(1998).
22. Homobono Adaza was charged by the Special Team of Prosecutors composed of
herein petitioners and supervised by petitioner Drilon, with the crime of rebellion
complexed with murder and frustrated murder. Before the criminal case was
terminated, Adaza then filed a complaint for damages against the same petitioners for
engaging in a deliberate, willful and malicious experimentation by filing against him a
charge of rebellion complexed with murder and frustrated murder when petitioners,
according to Adaza, were fully aware of the non-existence of such crime in the statue
books.
30. Gutib v. Court of Appeals, 312 SCRA 365, 378 (1999); Dizon v. Court of Appeals,
210 SCRA 107 (1992); Quisumbing v. Gumban, 193 SCRA 520 (1991); National
Investment and Development Corporation v. Aquino, 163 SCRA 153 (1988).
23. Supra, note 21, p. 220, citing Cabasaan v. Anota, 14169-R November 19, 1956.