Philippine Supreme Court Jurisprudence


Philippine Supreme Court Jurisprudence > Year 1956 > July 1956 Decisions > [G.R. Nos. L-6025-26. July 18, 1956.] THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. AMADO V. HERNANDEZ, ET AL., Defendants-Appellants.:




EN BANC

[G.R. Nos. L-6025-26.  July 18, 1956.]

THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. AMADO V. HERNANDEZ, ET AL., Defendants-Appellants.

 

R E S O L U T I O N

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 of the Communist Party of the Philippines (P.K.P.), with central offices in Manila and chapters and affiliated or associated labor unions and other ‘mass organizations’ in different places in the Philippines, and as such agency, organ, and instrumentality, fully cooperates in, and synchronizes its activities with the rebellious activities of the ‘Hukbong Magpalayang Bayan, (H.M.B.) and other organs, agencies, and instrumentalities of the Communist Party of the Philippines (P.K.P.) to thereby assure, facilitate, and effect the complete and permanent success of the armed rebellion against the Republic of the Philippines, as the herein Defendants and their co-conspirators have in fact synchronized the activities of the CLO with the rebellious activities of the HMB and other agencies, organs and instrumentalities of the Communist Party of the Philippines and have otherwise master- minded or promoted the cooperative efforts between the CLO and HMB and other agencies, organs, and instrumentalities of the P.K.P. in the prosecution of the rebellion against the Republic of the Philippines, and being then also high ranking officers and/or members of, or otherwise affiliated with, the Communist Party of the Philippines (P.K.P.), which is now actively engaged in an armed rebellion against the Government of the Philippines through acts therefor committed and planned to be further committed in Manila and other places in the Philippines, and of which party the ‘Hukbong Mapagpalaya ng Bayan’ (HMB), otherwise or formerly known as the ‘Hukbalahaps’ (Huks), is the armed force, did then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously help, support, promote, maintain, cause, direct and/or command the ‘Hukbong Mapagpalaya ng Bayan’ (HMB) or the ‘Hukbalahaps’ (Huks) to rise publicly and take arms against the Republic of the Philippines, or otherwise participate in such armed public uprising, for the purpose of removing the territory of the Philippines from the allegiance to the government and laws thereof as in fact the said ‘Hukbong Mapagpalaya ng Bayan’ or ‘Hukbalahaps’ have risen publicly and taken arms to attain the said purpose by then and there making armed raids, sorties and ambushes, attacks against police, constabulary and army detachments as well as innocent civilians, and 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, as follows, to wit:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“Then follows a description of the murders, arsons and robberies allegedly perpetrated by the accused “as a necessary means to commit the crime of rebellion, in connection therewith and in furtherance thereof.”

Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code provides that:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“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 allegiance to said Government or its laws, the territory of the Philippine Islands or any part thereof, of any body of land, naval or other armed forces, or of depriving the Chief Executive or the Legislature, wholly or partially, of any of their powers or prerogatives.”

Pursuant to Article 135 of the same code “any person, merely participating or executing the commands of others in a rebellion shall suffer the penalty of prision mayor in its minimum period.”

The penalty is increased to prision mayor and a fine not to exceed P20,000 for “any person who promotes, maintains or heads a rebellion or insurrection or who, while holding any public office or employment, takes part therein”:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

1.  “engaging in war against the forces of the government”,

2.  “destroying property”, or

3.  “committing serious violence”,

4.  “exacting contributions or”

5.  “diverting public funds from the lawful purpose for which they have been appropriated”.

Whether performed singly or collectively, these five (5) classes of acts constitute only one offense, and no more, and are, altogether, subject to only one penalty — prision mayor and a fine not to exceed P20,000. Thus for instance, a public officer who assists the rebels by turning over to them, for use in financing the uprising, the public funds entrusted to his custody, could neither be prosecuted for malversation of such funds, apart from rebellion, nor accused and convicted of the complex crime of rebellion with malversation of public funds. The reason is that such malversation is inherent in the crime of rebellion committed by him. In fact, he would not be guilty of rebellion had he not so misappropriated said funds. In the imposition, upon said public officer, of the penalty for rebellion it would even be improper to consider the aggravating circumstance of advantage taken by the offender of his public position, this being an essential element of the crime he had perpetrated. Now, then, if the office held by said offender and the nature of the funds malversed by him cannot aggravate the penalty for his offense, it is clear that neither may it worsen the very crime committed by the culprit by giving rise, either to an independent crime, or to a complex crime. Needless to say, a mere participant in the rebellion, who is not a public officer, should not be placed at a more disadvantageous position than the promoters, maintainers or leaders of the movement, or the public officers who join the same, insofar as the application of Article 48 is concerned.

One of the means by which rebellion may be committed, in the words of said Article 135, is by “engaging in war against the forces of the government” and “committing serious violence” in the prosecution of said “war”. These expressions imply everything that war connotes, namely; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryresort to arms, requisition of property and services, collection of taxes and contributions, restraint of liberty, damage to property, physical injuries and loss of life, and the hunger, illness and unhappiness that war leaves in its wake — except that, very often, it is worse than war in the international sense, for it involves internal struggle, a fight between brothers, with a bitterness and passion or ruthlessness seldom found in a contest between strangers. Being within the purview of “engaging in war” and “committing serious violence”, said resort to arms, with the resulting impairment or destruction of life and property, constitutes not two or more offense, but only one crime — that of rebellion plain and simple. Thus, for instance, it has been held that “the crime of treason may be committed ‘by executing either a single or similar intentional overt acts, different or similar but distinct, and for that reason, it may be considered one single continuous offense. (Guinto vs. Veluz, 77 Phil., 801, 44 Off. Gaz., 909.)” (People vs. Pacheco, 93 Phil., 521.)

Inasmuch as the acts specified in said Article 135 constitute, we repeat, one single crime, it follows necessarily that said acts offer no occasion for the application of Article 48, which requires therefor the commission of, at least, two crimes. Hence, this court has never in the past, convicted any person of the “complex crime of rebellion with murder”. What is more, it appears that in every one of the cases of rebellion published in the Philippine Reports, the Defendants were convicted of simple rebellion, although they had killed several persons, sometimes peace officers (U. S. vs. Lagnason, 3 Phil., 472; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryU. S. vs. Baldello, 3 Phil., 509, U. S. vs. Ayala, 6 Phil., 151; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryLeague vs. People, 73 Phil., 155).

Following a parallel line are our decisions in the more recent cases of treason, resulting from collaboration with the Japanese during the war in the Pacific. In fact, said cases went further than the aforementioned cases of rebellion, in that the theory of the prosecution to the effect that the accused in said treason cases were guilty of the complex crime of treason with murder and other crimes was expressly and repeatedly rejected therein. Thus, commenting on the decision of the People’s Court finding the accused in People vs. Prieto (80 Phil., 138, 45 Off. Gaz., 3329) “guilty of  cralaw the crime of treason complexed by murder and physical injuries” and sentencing him to death, and on the contention of the Solicitor General that Prieto had committed the “complex crime of treason with homicide”, this court, speaking through Mr. Justice Tuason, said:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“The execution of some of the guerrilla suspects mentioned in these counts and the infliction of physical injuries on others are not offenses separate from treason. Under the Philippine treason law and under the United States constitution defining treason, after which the former was patterned, there must concur both adherence to the enemy and giving him aid and comfort. One without the other does not make treason.

“In the nature of things, the giving of aid and comfort can only be accomplished by some kind of action. Its very nature partakes, of a deed or physical activity as opposed to a mental operation. (Cramer vs. U.S., ante.) This deed or physical activity may be, and often is, in itself a criminal offense under another penal statute or provision. Even so, when the deed is charged as an element of treason it 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. Just as one cannot be punished for possessing opium in a prosecution for smoking the identical drug, and a robber cannot be held guilty of coercion or trespass to a dwelling in a prosecution for robbery, because possession of opium and force and trespass are inherent in smoking and in robbery respectively, so may not a Defendant be made liable for murder as a separate crime or in conjunction with another offense where, as in this case, it is averred as a constitutive ingredient of treason cralaw . Where murder or physical injuries are charged as overt acts of treason  cralaw they cannot be regarded separately under their general denomination.” (Italics supplied.)

Accordingly, we convicted the accused of simple treason and sentenced him to life imprisonment.

In People vs. Labra, 81 Phil., 377, 46 Off. Gaz., Supp. No. 1, p. 159, we used the following language: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., 524, 46 Off. Gaz., 2517, we held:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“The People’s 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 overt acts which, besides traitorous intention supplied a vital ingredient in the crime.” (Italics supplied.)

The accused in People vs. Delgado 83 Phil., 9, 46 Off. Gaz., 4213, had been convicted by the People’s 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 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 People’s 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 People’s Court erred in finding the Appellant guilty of the complex crime of treason with murder, because murder was an ingredient of the crime of treason, as we have heretofore held in several cases. (Italics supplied.)

This was reiterated in People vs. Navea, 87 Phil., 1, 47 Off. Gaz., Supp. No. 12, p. 252:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“The Solicitor General recommends that the Appellant be sentenced for the complex crime of treason with murder. We have already ruled, however, that where, as in the present case, the killing is charged as an element of treason, it ‘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.” (Italics supplied.)

The question at bar was, also, taken up in the case of Crisologo vs. People and Villalobos (94 Phil., 477), decided on February 26, 1954. The facts and the rule therein laid down are set forth in our unanimous decision in said case, from which we quote:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“The Petitioner Juan D. Crisologo, a captain in the USAFFE during the last world war and at the time of the filing of the present petition a lieutenant colonel in the Armed Forces of the Philippines, was on March 12, 1946, accused of treason under Article 114 of the Revised Penal Code in an information filed in the People’s Court. But before the accused could be brought under the jurisdiction of the court, he was on January 13, 1947, indicted for violations of Commonwealth Act No. 408, otherwise known as the Articles of War, before a military court created by authority of the Army Chief of Staff, the indictment containing three charges, two of which, the first and third, were those of treason consisting in giving information and aid to the enemy leaving to the capture of USAFFE officers and men and other persons with anti-Japanese reputation and in urging members of the USAFFE to surrender and cooperate with the enemy, while the second was that of having certain civilians filled in time of war. Found innocent of the first and third charges but guilty of the second, he was on May, 8, 1947, sentenced by the military court to life imprisonment.

“With the approval on June 17, 1948, of Republic Act No. 311 abolishing the People’s Court, the criminal case in that court against the Petitioner was, pursuant to the provisions of said Act, transferred to the Court of First Instance of Zamboanga and there the charges of treason were amplified. Arraigned in that court upon the amended information, Petitioner presented a motion to quash, challenging the jurisdiction of the court and pleading double jeopardy because of his previous sentence in the military court. But the court denied the motion and, after Petitioner had pleaded not guilty, proceeded to trial, whereupon, the present petition for certiorari and prohibition was filed in this court to have the trial judge desist from proceeding with the trial and dismiss the case.

“It is, however, claimed that the offense charged in the military court different from that charged in the civil court and that even granting that the offense was identical the military court had no jurisdiction to take cognizance of the same because the People’s Court had previously acquired jurisdiction over the case with the result that the conviction in the court martial was void. In support of the first point, it is urged that the amended information filed in the Court of First Instance of Zamboanga contains overt acts distinct from those charged in the military court. But we note that while certain overt acts specified in the amended information in the Zamboanga court were not specified in the indictment in the court martial, they all are embraced in the general charge of treason, which is a 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 this court, on the question whether said crime may be complexed with murder, when the former was committed through the latter, and it is so alleged in the information, had positively and clearly crystalized itself in the negative as 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 People’s 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 done in the prosecution of said war, as a means necessary therefor, is embraced therein — unlike the provision on treason (Article 114, Revised Penal Code) which is less explicit thereon.

It is urged that, if the crime of assault upon a person in authority or an agent of a person in authority may be committed with physical injuries (U. S. vs. Montiel, 9 Phil., 162), homicide (People vs. Lojo, 52 Phil., 390) and murder (U. S. vs. Ginosolongo, 23 Phil., 171; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryU. S. vs. Baluyot, 40 Phil., 385), and rape may be perpetrated with physical injuries (U. S. vs. Andaya, 34 Phil., 690), then rebellion may, similarly, be complexed with murder, arson, or robbery. The conclusion does not follow, for engaging in war, serious violence, physical injuries and destruction of life and property are inherent in rebellion, but not in assault upon persons in authority or agents of persons in authority or in rape. The word “rebellion” evokes, not merely a challenge to the constituted authorities, but, also, civil war, on a bigger or lesser scale, with all the evils that go with it, whereas, neither rape nor assault upon persons in authority connotes necessarily, or even generally, either physical injuries, or murder. 1

In support of the theory that a rebel who kills in furtherance of the insurrection is guilty of the complex crime of rebellion with murder, our attention has been called to Article 244 of the old Penal Code of the Philippines, reading:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“Los delitos particulares cometidos en una rebelion o sedicion, o con motivo de ellas, seran castigados respectivamente segun las disposiciones de este Codigo.

“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

“Son reos de rebelion los que se alzaren publicamente y en abierta hostilidad contra el Gobierno para cualquiera de los objetossiguientes:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

1.  “Destronar al Rey, deponer al Regente o Regencia del Reino, o privarles de su libertad personal u obligarles a ejecutar un acto contrario a su voluntad.

2.  “Impedir la celebracion dc las elecciones para Diputados a Cortes o Senadores en todo el Reino, o la reunion legitima de las mismas.

3.  “Disolver las Cortes o impedir la deliberacion de alguno de los Cuerpos Colegisladores o arrancarles alguna resolucion.

4.  “Ejecutar cualquiera de los delitos previstos en el articulo 165.

5.  “Sustraer el Reino o parte de el o algun cuerpo de tropa de tierra o de mar, o cualquiera otra clase de fuerza armada, de la obediencia del Supremo Gobierno.

6.  “Usar y ejercer por si o despojar a los Ministros de la Corona de sus facultades constitucionales, o impedirles o coartarles su libre ejercicio. (Articulo 167, Codigo Penal de 1850. — Veanse las demas concordancias del articulo 181.)”

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

“El Tribunal Supremo de Justicia en sentencia de 5 de Febrero de 1872, tiene declarado:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary Que segun los articulos 184 del Codigo Penal de 1830, y 259 del reformado (1870), los delitos particulares cometidos en una rebelion o sedicion o con motivo de ellas se castigan respectivamente segun las disposiciones de los mismos Codigos; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryy con arreglo al decreto de amnistia de 9 de Agosto de 1876 estan solo comprendidos en aquella gracia las personas sentenciadas, procesadas o sujatas a responsabilidad por delitos politicos de cualquiera especie -cometidos desde el 29 de Septiembre de 1868; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryQue el asesinato del Gobernador Civil de Burgos no fue resultado de movimiento alguno politico, sino de un mero tumulto que imprimio el fanatismo, y cuya unica aparente tendencia era impedir que aquel funcionario inventariase ciertos objetos artisticos que se decian existentes en la Catedral:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary Que esto lo 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 señalado 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, the Endnote: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

“La provocacion y el ataque a la Guardia Civil por paisanos alzadoz tumultuariamente para impedir al Delegado de un Gobernador civil el cumplimiento de sus providencias, no pueden estimarse constitutivos de un delito distinto del de sedicion, ni ser, por tanto, perseguidos y penados separadamente.

“La resistencia o el acometimiento de los sublevados a la fuerza publica constituye, en su caso, una circunstancia o accidente de la sedicion y no es delito de los que el Codigo Penal en este articulo (formerly Article 244, now Article 227) supone que pueden cometerse en ella o con su motivo, los cuales denomina delitos particulares, y manda que se penen conforme a las disposiciones del propio Codigo. (S. 23-5-890; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryG. 23-6-890; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryt. 44; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarypagina 671)” (II Doctrina Penal del Tribunal Supremo, p. 2411.) (Italics supplied.)

“La Audiencia condeno como autores de atentado a dos de los amotinados que agredieron al alcalde, e interpuesto recurso de casacion contra la sentencia, el Tribunal Supremo la casa y anula, teniendo en cuenta lo dispuesto en el articulo 250 (numero 3.°) del Codigo Penal;

‘Considerando que el acto llevado a cabo por el grupo constituye una verdadera sedicion, sin que sea licito el dividir este hecho y calificarlo de atentado respecto a las personas que agredieron a dicho alcalde, porque el acometimiento fue un accidente de la sedicion, de la cual eran todos responsables, ya se efectuara por los agrupados en conjunto o por uno solo, por ser comun el objeto que se proponian y no individual; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryy al calificar y penar este hecho la Audencia de Gerona, de atentado  cralaw, ha incurrido en error de derecho e infringido los articulos 250 y siguientes del Codigo Penal, por no haberlos aplicado, y el 263, numero 2.°, en relacion con el 264, numeros 1.° y 3.°, por su aplicacion  cralaw” (Sent. 3 octubre 1903. — Gac. 12 Diciembre) (Enciclopedia Juridica Española, Tomo xxviii p. 250).

These cases are in accord with the text of said Article 244, which refers, not to all offenses committed in the course of a rebellion or on the occasion thereof, but only to “delitos particulares” or common crimes. Now, what are “delitos particulares” as the phrase is used in said article 244? We quote from Viada:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“Las disposicion del primer parrafo de este articulo no puede ser mas justa; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarycon arreglo a ella, los delitos particulares o comunes cometidos en una rebelion er sedicion no deberan reputarse como accidentes inherentes a estas, sino como delitos especiales, a dicha rebelion y sedicion ajenos, los que deberan ser respectivamente castigados con las penas que en este Codigo se las señalan. Pero, que delitos deberan considerarse como comunes, y cuales como constitutivos de la propia rebelion o sedicion? En cuanto a la rebelion, no ofrece esta cuestion dificultad alguna, pues todo hecho que no este comprendido en uno y otro de los objetos especificados en los seis numeros del articulo 243 sera extraño a la rebelion, y si se hallare definido en algun otro articulo del Codigo, con arreglo a este debera ser castigado como delito particular. Pero tratandose de la sedicion, comprendiendose como objetos de la misma, en los numeros 3.°, 4.° y 5.° del articulo 250, hechos que constituyen otros tantos ataques a las personas o a la propiedad, cuales se consideran como accidentes inherentes a la propria sedicion, y cuales deberan reputarse como delitos particulares o comunes? En cuanto a los casos de los numeros 4.° y 5.°, estimanos que el objeto politico y social que se requiera para la realizacion de los actos en aquellos comprendidos es el que debe servirnos de norma y guia para distinguir lo inherente a la sedicion de lo que es ajeno o extraño a ella. Cuando no exista ese objeto politico y social, el acto de odio o venganza ejercido contra los particulares o cualquiera clase del Estado, y el atentado contra las propiedades de los ciudadanos o corporaciones mentados en el numero 5.° del articulo 250, no seran constitutivos del delito de sedicion, sino que deberan ser apreciados y castigados como delitos comunes, segun las disposiciones respectivas de este Codigo — y por lo que toca a los actos de odio o venganza ejercidos en la persona o bienes de alguna Autoridad o sus agentes, estimamos que deberan reputarse como delitos comunes todos aquellos hechos innecesarios  2 para la consecucion del fin particular que se propusieran los sediciosos — y como esenciales, constitutivos de la propia sedicion todos aquellos actos de odio o venganza que sean medio racionalmente necesario para el logro del objeto especial a que se encaminaran los esfuerzos de los sublevados. Asi, en el caso de la Cuestion 1 expuesta en el comentario del articulo 258, es evidente que el fin que se propusieron los sediciosos fue no pagar el impuesto a cuya cobranza iba a proceder el comisionado; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarypero para lograr este objeto, como lo lograron, fue preciso hacer salir del pueblo al ejecutor, y a este efecto, lo amenazaron, lo persiguieron y llegaron hasta lesionarle. Esas amenazas y lesiones no pudieron apreciarse, ni las aprecio tampoco la Sala sentenciadora, como delito comun, sino como accidente inherente a la misma sedicion, por cuanto fueron un medio racionalmente necesario para la consecucion del fin determinado que se propusieron los culpables.

“Pero cuando tal necesidad desaparece, cuando se hiere por herir, cuando se mata por matar, el hecho ya, no puede ser considerado como un accidente propio de la sedicion, sino como un delito especial, al que debe aplicarse la pena al mismo correspondiente.” (III Viada, pp. 311-312.) (Italics supplied.)

Cuello Calon is even more illuminating. He says:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“La doctrina cientifica considera los delitos llamados politicos como infracciones de un caracter especial distintas de los denominados delitos comunes. De esta apreciacion ha nacido la division de los delitos, desde el punto de vista de su naturaleza intrinseca, en delitos politicos y delitos comunes o de derecho comun.

“Se reputan delitos comunes aquellos que lesionan bienes juridicos individuales (v. gr., los delitos contra la vida, contra la honestidad, contra la propiedad, etc.)

“La nocion del delito politico no parece tan clara. Desde luego revisten este caracter los que atentan contra el orden politico del Estado, contra su orden externo (independencia de la nacion, integridad del territorio, etc.), o contra el interno (delitos contra el Jefe del Estado, contra la forma de Gobierno, etc.). Pero tambien pueden ser considerados como politicos todos los delitos, cualesquiera que sean incluso los de derecho comun, cuando fueron cometidos por moviles politicos. Deben, por tanto, estimarse como infracciones de esta clase, no solo las que objetivamente tengan tal caracter por el interes politico que lesionan, sino tambien las que, apreciadas subjetivamente, manifiestan una motivacion de caracter politico.

“Asi podria formulares esta definicion:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary es delito politico el cometido contra el orden politico del Estado, asi como todo delito de cualquiera otra clase determinado por moviles politicos.” (Cuello Calon, Derecho Penal, Tomo I, pp. 247-249.)

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.’ Hansard’s 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 number of inhabitants of Ticino at the mode in which the political party then in power were conducting the government of the canton. A request was presented to the government for a revision of the constitution of the canton and, the government having declined to take a popular vote on that question, a number of the citizens of Bellinzona, among whom was Castioni, seized the arsenal of the town, from which they took rifles and ammunition, disarmed the gendarmes, arrested and bound or handcuffed several persons connected with the government, and forced them to march in front of the armed crowd to the municipal palace. Admission to the palace was demanded in the name of the people, and was refused by Rossi and another member of the government, who were in the palace. The crowd then broke open the outer gate of the palace, and rushed in, pushing before them the government officials whom they had arrested and bound. Castioni, who was armed with a revolver, was among the first to enter. A second door, which was locked, was broken open, and at this time, or immediately after, Rossi, who was in the passage, was shot through the body with a revolver, and died, very soon afterwards. Some other shots were fired, but no one else was injured. Castioni fled to England. His extradition was requested by the federal council of Switzerland. He was arrested and taken before a police magistrate, as provided by the statute, who held him for extradition. Application was made by the accused to the high court of justice of England for a writ of habeas corpus. He was represented by Sir Charles Russell, now lord chief justice. The attorney general, Sir Richard Webster, appeared for the crown, and the solicitor general, Sir Edward Clarke, and Robert Woodfal, for the federal council of Switzerland. This array of distinguished counsel, and the high character of the court, commends the case as one of the highest authority. It appeared from an admission by one of the parties engaged in the disturbances ‘that the death of Rossi was a misfortune, and not necessary for the rising.’ The opinions of the judges as to the political character of the crime charged against Castioni, upon the facts stated, is exceedingly interesting, but I need only refer to the following passages. Judge Denman says:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“The question really is whether, upon the facts, it is clear that the man was acting as one of a number of persons engaged in acts of violence of a political character with a political object, and as part of the political movement and rising in which he was taking part.’

“Judge Hawkins, in commenting upon the character of political offenses, said:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

‘I cannot help thinking that everybody knows there are many acts of a political character done without reason, done against all reason; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarybut at the same time one cannot look too hardly, and weigh in golden scales the acts of men hot in their political excitement. We know that in heat, and in heated blood, men often do things which are against and contrary to reason; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarybut none the less an act of this description may be done for the purpose of furthering and in furtherance of a political rising, even though it is an act which may be deplored and lamented, as even cruel and against all reason, by those who can calmly reflect upon it after the battle is over.’

“Sir James Stephens, whose definition as an author has already been cited, was one of the judges, and joined in the views taken as to the political character of the crime charged against Castioni. The prisoner was discharged. Applying, by analogy, the action of the English court in that case to the four cases now before me, under consideration, the conclusion 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 Caamaño (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.)

We quote the following from Endnote:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary (23) on pages 249-250, Vol. I, of Cuello Calon’s aforesaid work on “Derecho Penal.”

“En algunos Codigo y leyes de fecha proxima ya se halla una definicion de estos delitos. El Codigo penal ruso, en el articulo 58, define como ‘delitos contra revolucionarios’ los hechos encaminados a derrocar o debilitar el poder de los Consejos de trabajadores y campesinos y de los gobiernos de la Union de Republicas socialistas sovieticas, a destruir o debilitar la seguridad exterior de la Union de Republicas Sovieticas y las conquistas economicas, politicas y nacionales fundamentales de la revolucion proletaria.’ El Codigo Penal italiano de 1930 considera en eu articulo 8.° como delito politico ‘todo delito que ofenda un interes politico del Estado o un derecho politico del ciudadano.’ Tambien se reputa politico el delito comun deteminado, en todo o en parte por motivos politicos. En la ley alemana de extradicion de 25 diciembre 1929 se definen asi:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary ‘Son delitos politicos los atentados punibles directamente ejecutados contra la existencia o la seguridad del Estado, contra el jefe o contra un miembro del gobierno del Estado como tal, contra una corporacion constitucional, contra los derechos politicos las buenas relaciones con el extranjero.’ parrafo 3.°, 2.

“La 6a. Conferencia para la Unificacion del Derecho penal (Copenhague, 31 agosto — 3 septiembre 1935) adopto la siguiente nocion del delito politico:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“1.  Por delitos politicos se entienden los dirigidos contra la organizacion y funcionamiento del Estado o contra los derechos que de esta organizacion y funcionamiento provienen para el culpable.

“2.  Tambien se consideran como delitos politicos los delitos de derecho comun que constituyen hechos conexos con la ejecucion de los delitos previstos en seccion 1.°:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary como los hechos dirigidos a favorecer la ejecucion de un delito politico o a permitir al autor de este delito sustraerse a la aplicacion de la ley penal.

“3.  No se consideraran delitos politicos aquellos a los que su autor sea inducido por un motivo egoista y vil.

“4.  No se consideraran delitos los que creen un peligro para la comunidad o un estado de terror.” (Italics supplied.)

Thus, national, as well as international, laws and jurisprudence overwhelmingly favor the proposition that common crimes, perpetrated in furtherance of a political offense, are divested of their character as “common” offenses and 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 a graver penalty.

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:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary (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; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryand (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 word of Rodriguez Navarro:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“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 España, p. 2168.) 3

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: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 en su grado maximo, hasta el limite que represente la suma de las que pudieran imponerse, penando separadamente los delitos.

“Cuando la pena asi computada exceda de este limite, se sancionaran los delitos por separado.” (Rodriguez Navarro, Doctrino Penal del Tribunal Supremo, Vol. II, p. 2163.)

and that our Article 48 does not contain the qualification inserted in said amendment, restricting the imposition of the penalty for the graver offense in its maximum period to the case when it does not exceed the sum total of the penalties imposable if the acts charged were dealt with separately. The absence of said limitation in our Penal Code does not, to our mind, affect substantially the spirit of said Article 48. Indeed, if one act constitutes two or more offenses, there can be no reason to inflict a punishment graver than that prescribed for each one of said offenses put together. In directing that the penalty for the graver offense be, in such case, imposed in its maximum period, Article 48 could have had no other purpose than to prescribe a penalty lower than the aggregate of the penalties for each offense, if imposed separately. The reason for this benevolent spirit of Article 48 is readily discernible. When two or more crimes are the result of a single act, the offender is deemed less perverse than when he commits said crimes thru separate and distinct acts. Instead of sentencing him for each crime independently from the other, he must suffer the maximum of the penalty for the more serious one, on the assumption that it is less grave than the sum total of the separate penalties for each offense.

Did the framers of Article 48 have a different purpose in dealing therein with an offense which is a means necessary for the commission of another? To begin with, the culprit cannot, then, be considered as displaying a greater degree of malice than when the two offenses are independent of each other. On the contrary, since one offense is a necessary means for the commission of the other, the evil intent is one, which, at least, quantitatively, is lesser than when the two offenses are unrelated to each other, because, in such event, he is twice guilty of having harbored criminal designs and of carrying the same into execution. Furthermore, it must be presumed that the object of Article 48, in its entirety, is only one. We cannot assume that the purpose of the lawmaker, at the beginning of the single sentence of which said article consists, was to favor the accused, and that, before the sentence ended, the former had a change of heart and turned about face against the latter. If the second part of Article 48 had been meant to be unfavorable to the accused — and, hence, the exact opposite of the first part — each would have been placed in, separate provisions, instead of in one single article. If the first part sought to impose, upon the culprit, a penalty less grave than that which he would deserve if the two or more offenses resulting from his single act were punished separately, then this, also, must be the purpose of the second part, in dealing with an offense which is a necessary means for the commission of another.

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.

Incidentally, we cannot accept the explanation that crimes committed as a means necessary for the success of a rebellion had to be prosecuted separately under the provisions of Article 259 of the Penal Code of Spain, which is the counterpart of Article 244 of our old Penal Code. To begin with, these articles are part of a substantive law. They do not govern the manner or method of prosecution of the culprits. Then again, said precepts ordain that common crimes committed during a rebellion or sedition, or on the occasion thereof, “shall be respectively punished according to the provisions of this Code.” Among such provisions was Article 90 (later Article 71, then Article 75) of the Spanish Penal Code, and Article 89 of our old Penal Code, of which Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code of the Philippines is a substantial reproduction. Hence, had the Supreme Court of Spain or the Philippines believed that murders committed as a means necessary to attain the aims of an uprising were “common” crimes, the same would have been complexed with the rebellion or sedition, as the case may be.

The cases of People vs. Cabrera (43 Phil., 64) and People vs. Cabrera (43 Phil., 82) have not escaped our attention. Those cases involved members of the constabulary who rose publicly, for the purpose of performing acts of hate and vengeance upon the police force of Manila, and in an encounter with the latter, killed some members thereof. Charged with and convicted of sedition in the first case, they were accused of murder in the second case. They pleaded double jeopardy in the second case, upon the ground that the facts alleged in the information were those set forth in the charge in the first case, in which they had been convicted. This plea was rejected upon the ground that the organic law prohibited double jeopardy for the same offense, and that the offense of sedition is distinct and different from that of murder, although both were the result of the same act.

The question whether one offense was inherent in, or identified with, the other was not discussed or even considered in said cases. Besides, the lower court applied, in the murder case Article 89 of the old Penal Code — which is the counterpart of Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code — but this Court refused to do so. Again, simply because one act may constitute two or more offenses, it does not follow necessarily that a person may be prosecuted for one after conviction for the other, without violating the injunction against double jeopardy. For instance, if a man fires a shotgun at 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 main argument in support of the theory seeking to complex rebellion with murder and other offenses is that “war” — within the purview of the laws on rebellion and sedition — may be “waged” or “levied” without killing. This premise does not warrant, however, the conclusion — drawn therefrom — that any killing done in furtherance of a rebellion or sedition is independent therefrom, and may be complexed therewith, upon the ground that destruction of human life is not indispensable to the waging or levying of war. A person may kill another without inflicting physical injuries upon the latter, such, for instance, as by poisoning, drowning, suffocation or shock. Yet it is admitted that he who fatally stabs another cannot be convicted of homicide with physical injuries. So too, it is undeniable that treason may be committed without torturing or murdering anybody. Yet, it is well-settled that a citizen who gives aid and comfort to the enemy by taking direct part in the maltreatment and assassination of his (citizen’s) countrymen, in furtherance of the wishes of said enemy, is guilty of plain treason, not complexed with murder or physical injuries, the later being — as charged and proven — mere ingredients of the former. Now then, if homicide may be an ingredient of treason, why can it not be an ingredient of rebellion? The proponents of the idea of rebellion complexed with homicide,. etc., have not even tried to answer this question. Neither have they assailed the wisdom of our aforementioned decisions in treason cases.

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 co-equal 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 not necessary to go into the details of said legislative enactments. Suffice it to say that the same are predicated upon a recognition of the fact that a good many of the problems confronting the State are due to social and economic evils, and that, unless the latter are removed or, least minimized, the former will keep on harassing the community and affecting the well-being of its members.

Thus, the settled policy of our laws on rebellion, since the beginning of the century, has been one of decided leniency, in comparison with the laws enforce during the Spanish regime. Such policy has not suffered the slightest alteration. Although the Government has, for the past five or six years, adopted a more vigorous course of action in the apprehension of violators of said law and in their prosecution the established policy of the State, as regards the punishment of the culprits has remained unchanged since 1932. It is not for us to consider the merits and demerits of such policy. This falls within the province of the policy-making branch of the government the Congress of the Philippines. However, the following quotation from Cuello Calon indicates the schools of thought on this subject and the reason that may have influenced our lawmakers in making their choice:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“Durante muchos siglos, hasta tiempos relativamente cercanos, se reputaban los hechos que hoy llamamos delitos politicos como mas graves y peligrosos que los crimenes comunes. Se consideraba que mientras estos solo causan un daño individual, aquellos producen profundas perturbaciones en la vida collectiva llegando a poner en peligro la misma vida del Estado. En consonancia con estas ideas fueron reprimidos con extraordinaria severidad y designados con la denominacion romana de delitos de lesa majestad se catalogaron en las leyes penales como los crimenes mas temibles.

“Pero desde hace poco mas de un siglo se ha realizado en este punto una transformacion profunda merced a la cual la delincuencia politica dejo de apreciarse con los severos criterios de antaño quedando sometida a un regimen penal, por regla general suave y benevolo.

“El origen de este cambio se remonta, segun opinion muy difundida, a la revolucion que tuvo lugar en Francia en el año 1830. El gobierno de Luis Felipe establecio una honda separacion entre los delitos comunes y los politicos, siendo estos sometidos a una penalidad mas suave y sus autores exceptuados de la extradicion. Irradiando a otros paises tuvieron estas tan gran difusion que en casi todos los de regimen liberal-individualista se ha llegado a crear un tratamiento desprovisto de severidad para la represion de estos hechos. No solo las penas con que se conminaron perdieron gran parte de su antigua dureza, sino qua en algunos paises se creo un regimen penal mas suave para estos delicuentes, en otros se abolio para ellos la pena de muerte. Tan profundo contraste entre el antiguo y el actual tratamiento de la criminalidad politica en la mayoria de los paises solo puede ser explicado por las ideas nacidas y difundidas bajo los regimenes politicos liberalesacerca de estos delitos y delincuentes. Por una parte se ha afirmado que la criminalidad da estos hechos no contiene la misma inmoralidad que la delincuencia comun, que es tan solo relativa, qua depende del tiempo, del lugar, da las circumstancias, de las instituciones del pais. Otros invocan la elevacion de los moviles y sentimientos determinantes de estos hechos, el amor a la patria, la adhesion ferviente a determinadas ideas o principios, el espiritu de sacrificio por el triunfo de un ideal.

“Contra su trato benevolo, del que no pocas veces se han beneficiado peligrosos malhechores, se ha iniciado hace algun tiempo una fuerte reaccion (vease Cap. XV, 3.°, b), que llego a alcanzar considerable severidad en las legislaciones de tipo autoritario, y que tambien ha hallado eco, en forma mas suave, en las de otros paises de constitucion democratica en los que, especialmente en los ultimos años, la frecuencia de agitaciones politicas y sociales ha originado la publicacion de numerosas leyes encaminadas a la proteccion penal del Estado.” (Cuello Calon, Derecho Penal, Tomo 1, pp. 250-252.)

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.

In conclusion, we hold that, under the allegations of the amended information against Defendant-Appellant Amado V. Hernandez, the murders, arsons and robberies described therein are mere ingredients of the crime of rebellion allegedly committed by said Defendants, as means “necessary” 4 for the perpetration of said offense of rebellion; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarythat the crime charged in the aforementioned amended information is, therefore, simple rebellion, not the complex crime of rebellion with multiple murder, arsons and robberies; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarythat the maximum penalty imposable under such charge cannot exceed twelve (12) years of prision mayor and a fine of P20,000; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryand that, in conformity with the policy of this court in dealing with accused persons amenable to a similar punishment, said Defendant may be allowed bail.

It is urged that, in the exercise of its discretion, the Court should deny the motion under consideration, because the security of the State so requires, and because the judgment of conviction appealed from indicates that the evidence of guilt of Amado V. Hernandez is strong. However, as held in a resolution of this court, dated January 29, 1953, in the case of Montano vs. Ocampo (G.R. L-6352):chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

cralaw to deny bail it is not enough that the evidence of guilt is strong; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryit must also appear that in case of conviction the Defendant’s criminal liability would probably call for a capital punishment. No clear or conclusive showing before this Court has been made.”

In fact, in the case at bar, Defendant Amado V. Hernandez was sentenced by the lower court, not to the extreme penalty, but to life imprisonment. Furthermore, individual freedom is too basic, too transcendental and vital in a republican state, like ours, to be denied upon mere general principles and abstract consideration of public safety. Indeed, the preservation of liberty is such a major preoccupation of our political system that, not satisfied with guaranteeing its enjoyment in the very first paragraph of section (1) of the Bill of Rights, the framers of our Constitution devoted paragraphs (3), (4), (5), (6), (7), (8), (11), (12), (13), (14), (15), (16), (17), (18), and (21) of said section (1) to the protection of several aspects of freedom. Thus, in line with the letter and spirit of the fundamental law, we said in the aforementioned case of Montano vs. Ocampo:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“Exclusion from bail in capital offenses being an exception to the otherwise absolute right guaranteed by the constitution, the natural tendency of the courts has been toward a fair and liberal appreciation, rather than otherwise, of the evidence in the determination of the degree of proof and presumption of guilt necessary to warrant a deprivation of that right.”

x x x                    x x x                    x x x

“In the evaluation of the evidence the probability of flight is one other important factor to be taken into account. The sole purpose of confining accused in jail before conviction, it has been observed, is to secure his presence at the trial. In other words, if denial of bail is authorized in capital cases, it is only on the theory that the proof being strong, the Defendant would flee, if he has the opportunity, rather than face the verdict of the jury. Hence, the exception to the fundamental right to be bailed should be applied in direct ratio to the extent of the probability of evasion of prosecution.

“The possibility of escape in this case, bearing in mind the Defendant’s official and social standing and his other personal circumstances, seem remote if not nil.”

This view applies fully to Amado V. Hernandez, with the particularity that there is an additional circumstance in his favor — he has been detained since January 1951, or for more than five (5) years, and it may still take some time to dispose of the case, for the same has not been, and is not in a position to be, included, as yet, in our calendar, inasmuch as the briefs for some Appellants — other than Hernandez — as well as the brief for the Government, are pending submission. It should be noted, also, that the decision appealed from the opposition to the motion in question do not reveal satisfactorily and concrete, positive act of the accused showing, sufficiently, that his provincial release, during the pendency of the appeal, would jeopardize the security of the State.

Wherefore, the aforementioned motion for bail of Defendant- Appellant Amado V. Hernandez is hereby granted and, upon the filing of a bond, with sufficient sureties, in the sum of P30,000, and its approval by the court, let said Defendant-Appellant be provisionally released. It is SO ORDERED.

Paras, C.J., Reyes, A., Bautista Angelo and Reyes. J.B.L., JJ., concur.

Bengzon, J., concurs in the result.

 

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 co-Defendants 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 the Defendants. After trial Amado V. Hernandez was found guilty and sentenced to suffer life imprisonment from which judgment and sentence he appealed. The appeal is pending in 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.

Section 1, paragraph 16, Article III, of the Constitution provides:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

All persons shall before conviction be bailable by sufficient sureties, except those charged with capital offenses when evidence of guilt is strong. Excessive bail shall not be required. (Italics supplied.)

The pertinent sections of Rule 110 provide:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

SEC. 3.  Offenses less than capital before conviction by the Court of First Instance. — After judgment by a justice of the peace and before conviction by the Court of First Instance, the Defendant shall be admitted to bail as of right.

SEC. 4.  Noncapital offenses after conviction by the Court of First Instance. — After conviction by the Court of First Instance Defendant may, upon application, be bailed at the discretion of the court.

SEC. 5.  Capital offenses defined. A capital offense, as the term is used in this rule, is an offense which, under the law existing at the time of its commission, and at the time of the application to be admitted to bail, may be punished by death.

SEC. 6.  Capital offenses not bailable. — No person in custody for the commission of a capital offense shall be admitted to bail if the evidence of his guilt is strong.

SEC. 7.  Capital offenses - burden of proof. — On the hearing of an application for admission to bail made by any person who is in custody for the commission of a capital offense, the burden of showing that evidence of guilt is strong is on the prosecution.

SEC. 13.  Bail on appeal. — Bail upon appeal must conform in all respects as provided for in other cases of bail.

According to this Rule, a Defendant in a criminal case after a judgment of conviction by the Justice of the Peace Court and before conviction by the Court of First Instance is entitled to bail. After conviction by the Court of First Instance he, upon application, may still be bailed in non-capital offenses but at the discretion of the court. When the information charges a capital offense the Defendant is not entitled to bail if the evidence of his guilt is strong. Of course this means before conviction. After conviction for a capital offense, the Defendant has absolutely no right to bail, because even before conviction a Defendant charged with capital offense is not entitled to bail if the evidence of guilt is strong. So that should a Defendant charged with a capital offense apply for bail before conviction, the prosecution must establish and show that the evidence of the Defendant’s guilt is strong if the application for bail be objected to. After conviction of a Defendant charged with a capital offense there is no stronger evidence of his guilt than the judgment rendered by the trial court. The judgment is entitled to full faith and credit. Until after the evidence shall have been reviewed and the reviewing court shall have found that the trial court committed error in 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.

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.

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 Court’s previous stand, because the security of the State is at stake.

For these reasons I dissent.

 

MONTEMAYOR, J., dissenting:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

Unable to agree to the resolution of the majority, I am constrained to dissent therefrom, not so much from the part thereof granting the motion for bail, as where it holds not only that there can be no complex crime of rebellion with multiple murder, robbery, arson, etc., but that these crimes when committed during and on the occasion of a rebellion, are absorbed by the latter. The new doctrine now being laid down besides being, to my mind, quite radical and in open and clear contravention of public policy, is fundamental and of far-reaching consequences, and I feel it my duty not only to voice my dissent but also to state the reasons in support thereof.

The resolution cites and quotes Article 135 of the Revised Penal Code to support its theory that the five acts enumerated therein particularly those of engaging in war against the forces of the government, destroying property and committing serious violence, cover all the murders, robberies, arsons, etc., committed on the occasion of or during a rebellion; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryand it proceeds to assert that the expressions used in said article, such as engaging in war against the forces of the government and committing serious violence imply everything that war connotes such as physical injuries and loss of life. In this connection, it is of profit and even necessary to refer to Article 134 of the Revised Penal Code defining and describing how the crime of rebellion is committed.

“Art. 134.  Rebellion or insurrection — How committed. — The crime of rebellion or insurrection is committed by rising publicly and taking arms against the Government for the purpose of removing from the allegiance to said Government or its laws, the territory of the Philippine Islands or any part thereof, of any body of land, naval or other armed forces, or of depriving the Chief Executive or the Legislature, wholly or partially, of any of their powers or prerogatives.”

According to the above article, rebellion is committed by rising publicly and taking arms against the government for the purpose or purposes enumerated in said article. In other words, the commission of rebellion is complete and consummated if a group of persons for the purposes enumerated in the article, rise publicly, take up arms and assemble. It is not necessary for its consummation that anybody be injured or killed, be it a government soldier or civilian, or that innocent persons be forcibly deprived of their properties by means of robbery or that their stores and houses be looted and then burned to the ground. Stated differently, murders, robberies, arsons, etc., are not necessary or indispensable in the commission of rebellion and, consequently, are not ingredients or elements of the latter.

Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code providing for “Penalty for complex crimes” reads thus:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“ART. 48.  Penalty for complex crimes. — 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.” (As amended by Act No. 4000.)

For better understanding, I deem it advisable to ascertain and explain the meaning of the phrase “necessary means” used in Article 48. “Necessary means” as interpreted by criminologists, jurists and legal commentators, does not mean indispensable means, because if it did, then the offense as a “necessary means” to commit another would be an indispensable element of the latter and would be an ingredient thereof. That would be true in the offense of trespass to dwelling to commit robbery in an inhabited house, or the infliction of physical injuries to commit homicide or murder. The phrase “necessary means” used in Article 48, merely signifies that for instance, a crime such as simple estafa can be and ordinarily is committed in the manner defined and described in the Penal Code; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarybut, if the “estafador” resorts to or employs falsification, merely to facilitate and insure his committing the estafa, then he is guilty of the complex crime of estafa thru falsification. So, if one desiring to rape a certain woman, instead of waiting for an opportunity where she could be alone or helpless, in the fields or some isolated place, abducts her by force and takes her to a forest to ravish her; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryor he enters her home through a window at night and rapes her in her room, then he is guilty of the complex crime of abduction with rape or rape with trespass to dwelling. The reason is that the commission of abduction of trespass to dwelling are not indispensable means or ingredients of the crime of rape. They are but means selected by the culprit to facilitate and carry out perhaps more quickly his evil designs on his victim. Says the eminent Spanish commentator, Groizard, on this point:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“Una cosa analoga acontece respecto de los delitos conexionados con una relacion de medio a fin. Tambien en ellos la unidad de acto moral, que da vida al delito, hace logica la imposicion de una sola pena. Preciso es, sin embargo, distinguir el caso en que el delito medio sea medio necesario de realizar el delito fin, del caso en que sea puramente medio, pero no medio indispensable. En aquel, el delito medio no es, en realidad, sino una condicion precisa, una circumstancia sine qua non, un elemento integral de la accion punible concebida como fin. Sin pasar por uno, seria imposible llegar al otro. La voluntad, libre e inteligente, tiene entonces por unico objeto llegar al delito fin. Si al recorrer su camino ha de pasar, indispensablemante, por la comision de otro hecho punible, no dos, sino un delito habra que castigar, toda ves que uno fue el mal libremente querido, no siendolo el otro por si, sino en tanto que era necesario para obtener, la realizacion del mal proposito concebido.”

x x x                    x x x                    x x x

“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.”

x x x                    x x x                    x x x

“Ejemplo:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary el allanamiento de domicilio como medio de llegar al delito de violacion. No es condicion necesaria, para que la violacion pueda realizarse, el entrar en la morada ajena contra la voluntad de su dueño. Sin esa circunstancia, el delito puede existir. Ahora bien; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarysi el criminal acepta como medio de llegar a la violacion el allanamiento de domicilio, este delito y el de violacion deben ser castigados observandose en la aplicacion del castigo una unidad de penalidad que guarde cierta analogia con la unidad de pensamiento que llevo en culpable a la ralizacion de ambos delitos. Para estos y analogos casos, la razon aprueba la imposicion de la mas grave de las penas en su grado maximo.” (Groizard, El Codigo Penal de 1870, Tomo II, pp. 495-496.)

Applying the above observations to the crime of rebellion as defined in Article 134, the same may be committed by merely rising publicly and taking arms against the government, such as was done on several occasions as alleged in the information for rebellion in the present case where a group of Hukbalahaps, entered towns, overpowered the guards at the Presidencia confiscated firearms and the contents of the municipal treasurer’s safe, exacted contributions in the form of money, food-stuffs and clothing from the residents and maintained virtual control of the town for a few hours. That is simple but consummated rebellion. Murder, robbery, arson, etc., are not necessary or indispensable to consummate the crime of rebellion.

But in other cases, this group or other groups of dissidents in order to facilitate achieving their objective to overthrow the government, according to the findings of the trial courts in several cases of rebellion, resorted to looting and robberies to raise funds to finance their movement, sometimes killing civilians who refused to contribute or to be recruited to augment the forces of the rebels or who were suspected of giving information to the government forces of the movements of the dissidents. Sometimes, homes of town and barrio residents are set on fire and burned to the ground in reprisal or in order to strike terror into the hearts of the inhabitants, so that they would be more amenable to the rule and the demands of the rebels. At other times, civilians were kidnapped for purposes of ransom, and some hostages killed when the ransom was not paid or was not forthcoming. In the raid on Camp Macabulos in Tarlac, besides shooting down soldiers and officers, buildings were set on fire, inducing the hospital, as a result of which, patients including a Red Cross nurse were killed. In another case, a passenger bus containing about forty civilian passengers in Sta. Cruz, Zambales, was held up by these armed dissidents; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarythe passengers were robbed of their money and jewelry and fourteen of them were shot to death. The party of Mrs. Aurora Quezon while on its way to the town of Baler, was ambushed in Bongabong, Nueva Ecija by the dissidents and several members of the party, including herself, her daughter, her son-in-law, Mayor Bernardo of Quezon City, and others were killed, and their persons despoiled of jewelries and belongings. It is clear that all these acts of murder, vandalism, banditry and pillage cannot be regarded as ingredients and indispensable elements of the crime of rebellion. The aforecited acts and cases, the enumeration of which is far from complete, are not based on mere suspicion or hearsay. They are alleged as facts in the numerous counts contained in complaints or informations for rebellion with multiple murder, robbery, arson, kidnapping, etc. in several separate cases in the Courts of First Instance, some still pending trial-but quite a number already decided and now pending appeal before us. There must be much truth to these charges and counts because in the case against Huk Supremo Luis Taruc, William Pomeroy et al., (criminal case No. 19166 C.F.I., Manila) Pomeroy pleaded guilty to all the thirty counts against him; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryso did Taruc after seven counts had been eliminated from the thirty contained in the information. Among the twenty three counts remaining to which Taruc pleaded guilty were the holding up of forty civilians in a passenger bus in Sta. Cruz, Zambales, and the night raid on Camp Macabulos where hospital patients and a Red Cross nurse were killed.

Since the above mentioned crimes of multiple murder, robbery, kidnapping, etc., are not ingredients of rebellion nor indispensable to its commission but only means selected and employed by the offenders to commit rebellion and achieve their goal, a complex crime is committed under Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code.

Going back to the theory of the majority in the resolution that the phrase engaging in war and committing serious violence used in Article 134, covers the crimes of murder, robbery, arson, etc., committed during a rebellion, I emphatically disagree. Engaging in war and levying war, against the government, are general terms employed in the United States statutes to define rebellion and treason. They are used interchangeably and have the same meaning in our law on rebellion and treason, (Articles 114, 134, 135, Revised Penal Code) which are based on Act 292 of American origin. They do not necessarily mean actual killing of government troops, much less of innocent civilians.

“Levying War. — The assembling of a body of men for the purpose of effecting by force a treasonable object; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryand all who perform any part, however, minute, or however remote from the scene of action, and who are leagued in the general conspiracy, are considered as engaged in levying war, within the meaning of the constitution.” (Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, Vol. 2, p. 1938.)

This Tribunal defines “levying war” in the case of U.S. vs. Lagnason, 3 Phil., 478-9, thus:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“Whatever differences there may have been among the early judges as to whether an armed resistance to the enforcement of a public law (see Act No. 292, section 5, 1) constituted a levying of war or not, and war or was not treason, yet they were all unanimous in holding that acts of violence committed by an armed body of men with the purpose of overthrowing the Government was “levying war against the United States,” and was therefore treason, whether it was done by ten men or ten thousand. (See United States vs. Hanway, 2 Wall., jr., 139; chan roblesvirtualawlibrary26 Fed. Cases, 105.)

x x x                    x x x                    x x x

“As the act of engaging in a rebellion is levying war, and therefore treason, the same act seems to be punished by both sections and in different ways.” (U. S. vs. Lagnason, 3 Phil., 48-9.)

Just as a citizen can commit treason by adhering to the enemy and committing treasonable overt acts such as pointing out and helping arrest guerrillas, accompanying enemy soldiers on patrol and giving valuable information to the enemy, without himself killing anyone of his countrymen, this although Article 114 uses the phrase levying war to define-treason, so, although Article 135 uses the phrase “engaging in war”, a group of individuals may also commit rebellion by merely rising publicly and taking arms against the government without firing a single shot or inflicting a single wound.

But the majority says that serious violence mentioned in Article 134 may include murder. To me, this view is untenable. From serious violence to the capital offense of murder, certainly, is a far cry. Besides, serious violence can also be on things. In my opinion, the different acts mentioned in Article 135, among them, destroying property, committing serious violence, exacting contributions or diverting public funds, instead of giving license and unlimited leave to rebels and dissidents to engage in mass murder, looting and wholesale destruction of property, on the contrary, serve to limit and restrict the violations of law that may be included in and absorbed by rebellion. Article 135 mentions those acts which generally accompany a public armed uprising. When rebels raid a town or barrio, manhandling of civilians who obstruct their movements or fail to carry out their orders such as to lend their carabaos and carts for transportation purposes, or to contribute food, clothes, medicines, money etc., may be expected. The rebels may employ force to disarm the policeman guarding the Presidencia and if he offers resistance beat him up or, once inside, break down the door of the treasurer’s office, blow up his safe and carry away the money contents thereof. All these acts involve violence, even serious violence on persons and things, including diversion of public funds. But knowing that these law violations, relatively not serious, are generally unavoidable in public armed uprisings involving hastily assembled persons and groups with little discipline’ the law tolerates them, considering them as part of the rebellion. But when rebels rob innocent civilians, kidnap them for purposes of ransom, even kill them merely because they fail to pay the ransom, and civilian houses are put to the torch, endangering the lives of the inmates; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarywhen civilians are killed for refusing to contribute, or on mere suspicion of their giving information to the government, I cannot believe that these brutal act are condoned by the law and are to be included in the crime of rebellion.

The majority leans heavily on our decisions in several treason cases wherein we refused or failed to convict of the complex crime of treason with multiple murder. To me, those cases are neither controlling nor applicable for several reasons. Almost invariably, indictment in those treason cases alleged the killings committed by the indictees as ingredients and elements of treason. They are mentioned as the overt acts to establish and prove treason. Naturally, the court held that being ingredients of the crime of treason they cannot be considered as distinct and separate offenses for the purpose of applying Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code. Another reason is that, treason being a capital offense, this court did not see any immediate necessity for considering and applying the theory of complex crime because the result would in many cases be practically the same. In other words, treason might yet be said to absorb the crime of homicide, even of murder, because as regards the penalty, they are of the same category. Still another reason, not an unimportant one is that at that time, opinion among the members of this Tribunal on the question of complex crime of treason with homicide, sedition with murder and rebellion with murder, arson, robbery, etc., had not yet crystalized, one way or the other. So, we preferred to avoid ruling on the issue, specially since by considering the commission of murder, robbery, etc., in treason as aggravating the crime, we would achieve the same result as regards the penalty to be imposed.

But in the case of People vs. Perfecto Labra, G.R. No. 1240, May 12, 1949, this court through Mr. Justice Bengzon, accepted the view of the Solicitor General that under Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code, Labra was guilty of the complex crime of treason with murder, as shown by the dispositive part of our decision in that case, which is quoted below:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“Wherefore, the verdict of guilt must be affirmed. Article 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.”

The only reason why the death penalty was not imposed in said case was because of lack of sufficient votes but evidently, the Justices were agreed as to the application of Article 48 of the Penal Code regarding complex crimes.

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 General’s 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 Appellant was 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, 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

“Los delitos particulares cometidos en una rebellion o sedicion o con motivo de ellas, seran castigados respectivamente, segun las disposiciones de este Codigo.

“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.)

In commenting on Article 259 of the Spanish Penal Code, Viada says:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“‘La disposicion del primer parrafo de este articulo no puede ser mas justa; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarycon arreglo a ella, los delitos particulares o comunes cometidos en una rebellion o sedicion no deberan reputarse como accidentes inherentes a estas, sino como delitos especiales a dicha rebellion y sedicion ajenos, los que deberan ser respectivamente castigados con als penas que en este Codigo se les señalan. Pero que delitos deberan considerarse como comunes, y cuales como constitutivos de la propia rebelion o sedicion? En cuanto a la rebelion, no ofrece este cuestion dificultad alguna, pues todo hecho que no este comprendido en uno u otro de los objetos especificados en los seis numeros del Articulo 243 sera extraño a la rebelion, y si se este debera ser castigado como delito particular.’“ (Viada, Codigo Penal, Tomo II, 198-199.)

Peña, another commentator, referring to Article 259 of the Spanish Penal Gode, has the following to say:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“La disposicion de este articulo es sobradamente justa, pero cuando se entendera que el hecho es independiente de la insurgencia? Tratandose de la rebelion no hay problema, pues todos los fines que se indican en el Articulo 214 se distinguen facilmente de un asesinato, un robo, una violacion, etc. El problema puede surgir con la sedicion, en cuyos tres ultimos numeros, dice un autor, se tipifican conductas que muy bien pueden ser subsimidas en otros lugares del Codigo. El T.S. parece que sigue este principio general:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary las infracciones graves se consideran como delitos independientes, en cambio los hechos de menor gravedad puedan ser considerados como accidentes de la rebelion. En este sentido, el T.S. ha declarado que son accidentes de la rebelion, los desacatos y lesiones a la autoridad y otros delitos contra el orden publico, asi como la resistencia o acometiendo a la fuerza publica (23 Mayo 1890). El abuso de superioridad tambien es inherente el alzamiento tumultuario (19 noviembre 1906.)” (Peña Deredes Penal, Tomo II pp. 89-90.)

Another commentator, A. Quintano Ripolles, says of Article 259 of the Spanish Penal Code, counterpart of Article 244 of our old Penal Code:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“La concurrencia de delitos consignada en este articulo no puede ser mas justa, bien que la dificultad persista siempre para determinar cuales han de ser los particulares accidentales y cuales los integrantes de la propia subversion. Una doctrina demasiado simplista, que ha sido a menudo seguida por la Jurisprudencia, es la de estimar que, absorbiendo el delito mas grave al que lo es menos, todo el que por debajo del de rebelion o sedicion sera anulado por este. Para los del la misma naturaleza, la cosa es incuestionable, pero no para los que la tengan diversa, entendiendo por la estraña e imprecisa expresion de (particulares) a las infracciones comunes o no politicas.” (A. Quintano Ripolles, Comentarios al Codigo Penal Vol. II, pp. 101-102; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarycursivas con neustras.)

Another distinguished legal commentator gives his view on the same Article 259:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“Se establece aqui que en una rebelion o sedicion, o con motivo de ellas, comente 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 embebida en la de estos delitos, y, por tanto, no son punibles especialmente — los hechos de escasa gravedad (v:chanroblesvirtuallawlibraryg., 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 del la sedicion.” (Cuello Calon, Vol. 2 Derecho Penal p. 110.)

Finally, Groizard, another eminent commentator of the Penal code of Spain, in commenting on the same Article 259 of the Spanish Penal Code of 1870, says the following:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“No necesita ninguno el parrafo primero de este articulo. Aunque no se hubiera escrito en el Codigo, harian los Tribunales lo que dice. Seria necesario para que asi no sucediera el que fuera la rebelion un motivo de exencion de responsabilidad criminal para las demas clases de delitos.” (Groizard Tomo 3, 650.)

It will be seen that Spanish jurists and legal commentators are, with reference to Article 259 of the Spanish Penal Code of 1870, unanimous in the opinion that this provision of the Criminal Law is just and fair because one should not take advantage of his committing the crime of rebellion by 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

“ART. 24.  All other crimes committed in the course of a rebellion of seditious movement, or on occasion thereof, shall be punished in accordance with the rules of this Code.

“If the perpetrators of such crimes cannot be discovered, the principal leaders of the rebellion or sedition shall be punished therefore as principals.”

In this jurisdiction, we have faithfully observed and applied this penal provision. In the cases of U. S. vs. Cabrera, et al., 43 Phil., page 64 and page 82 for sedition and multiple murder respectively, wherein members of the Philippine constabulary attacked and killed several policemen in the City of Manila, this Court convicted said soldiers, first, of sedition and later, of multiple murder, clear proof that the murders committed in the course of and by reason of the sedition were not included in and absorbed by sedition, this despite the fact that our law on sedition then, section 5 of Act No. 292, uses the words — rise publicly and tumultuously, in order to attain by force or outside of legal methods any of the following objects are guilty of sedition. In the multiple murder case, the sergeants and corporals of the constabulary, who took part in the killing of the city policemen, were sentenced to death. This court in that case said: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 jurisprudence, rebellion and sedition include crimes like murder, robbery, arson, etc., committed in the course thereof. But it will be noticed that of the nine Justices who signed the decision in the case of People vs. Cabrera for multiple murder, five, including Mr. Justice Malcolm, who penned the decision, were Americans, supposed to be steeped in American Law and the common law, and yet they all held that sedition where force is expected to be used, did not, include murder. It is evident that the insinuation made in the majority resolution is not exactly borne out by the Cabrera case.

The majority asks why in the past, especially up to 1932, when our Revised Penal Code was promulgated no one had ever been prosecuted, much less convicted of rebellion or sedition complexed with murder, robbery, etc., if it is true that there is such a complex crime of rebellion with murder. For that matter, one may even ask why the constabulary soldiers in the Cabrera case were not charged with the complex crime of sedition with murder. The reason and the answer are obvious. Until 1932, the year of the promulgation of our Revised Penal Code, our old Penal Code included Article 244, the counter-part of Article 259 of the Spanish Penal Code, to the effect that common crimes like murder, robbery, arson, committed on the occasion or by reason of a rebellion or sedition, are to be prosecuted separately. That was why insurgents who committed rebellion or insurrection with homicide or murder during the first days of the American regime in the Philippines, could not be charged with the complex crime of rebellion with murder; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryand that explains why Cabrera and his co-accused could not be charged with the complex crime of sedition with multiple murder, but were prosecuted separately for multiple murder.

The majority also asks why the insurgents in the year 1901 and 1902 were charged only with rebellion but never with murder despite the fact that there was proof that they also had committed murder in the course of the rebellion or insurrection. The reason to my mind was that, shortly thereafter, came the proclamation of amnesty issued by President McKinley of the United States, which amnesty covered not only the crime of rebellion but also other violations of the law committed in the course of the rebellion.

Then came our Revised Penal Code promulgated in 1932. It is a revision of our old Penal Code of 1887. One of the purposes of the revision was simplification, and elimination of unnecessary provisions. In proof of this, while our Penal Code of 1887 contained 611 articles, our Revised Penal Code contains only 367 articles. Among the articles of the old Penal Code not included in the Revised Penal Code, is Article 244. Does the omission or elimination of Article 244 mean that now, common crimes like murder, robbery, arson, etc., committed in the course of a rebellion or sedition are absorbed by rebellion or sedition? Hardly. It cannot be that the committee on revision and our legislators abandoned the idea and the theory contained in said Article 244, because as I have already explained, all the Spanish commentators and jurists commenting on this particular provision of the Spanish Penal Code are agreed that it is a just and reasonable provision, so that sedition and rebellion may not be utilized as a cloak of immunity in the commission of other serious crimes. To me, the reason for the omission is that it was really unnecessary. As Groizard said in his commentary already reproduced, even if that provision were not embodied in the penal code, the court would still apply said provision:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“No necesita ninguno el parrafo primero de este articulo. Aunque no se hubiera excrito en el Codigo, harian los Tribunales lo que dice. Seria necesario para que asi no sucediera el que fuera la rebelion un motivo de exencion de responsabilidad criminal para las demas clases de delitos.” (Groizard Tomo 3, 650.)

The members of the committee on revision of our old Penal Code who must have been familiar with the opinion and comments of eminent Spanish jurists, particularly the above comment of Groizard undoubtedly, deemed the provision of Article 244 superfluous and unnecessary, and so omitted it in the revision. However, this omission of Article 244 of our Penal Code in the new, has an important effect. No longer shall we be obliged to prosecute murder, robbery, arson, kidnapping, etc., committed in the course of and by reason of a sedition or a rebellion, separately. The prosecution is now free to combine these common crimes with the crimes of sedition or rebellion and charge a complex crime. And that is what has been done in the prosecution of the numerous cases of rebellion.

This idea, this theory of complex crime of rebellion with multiple murder, etc., is not such a strange, extravagant or fantastic proposition or idea. We are not the only ones holding this view. Out of seven separate cases, all involving the complex crime of rebellion with multiple murder and etc., decided in the Court of First Instance, not long ago, cases No. 14070 — People vs. Lava; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryNo. 15841 — People vs. Hernandez; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryNo. 2878 — 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 is found in a portion of our decision in that case which we quote:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“The last point to be determined is the nature of the offense or offenses committed. Appellants were charged with and convicted of the complex crime of rebellion with multiple murder, frustrated murder, arson and robbery. Is there such a complex crime of rebellion with multiple murder, etc.? While the Solicitor General in his brief claims that Appellants are guilty of said complex crime and in support of his stand ‘asks for leave to incorporate by reference’ his previous arguments in opposing Umali’s petition for bail, counsel for Appellants considered it unnecessary to discuss the existence or non- existence of such complex crime, saying that the nature of the crime committed ‘is of no moment to herein Appellants because they had absolutely no part in it whatsoever’. For the present, and with respect to this particular case, we deem it unnecessary to decide this important and controversial question, deferring its consideration and determination to another case or occasion more opportune, when it is more directly and squarely raised and both parties given an opportunity to discuss and argue the question more adequately and exhaustively. Considering that, assuming for the moment that there is no such complex crime of rebellion with murder; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryetc., and that consequently Appellants could not have been legally charged with it, much less convicted of said complex crime, and the information should therefore, be regarded as having charged more than one offense, contrary to Rule 106, section 12 and Rule 113, section 2(e), of the Rules of Court, but that Appellants having interposed no objection thereto, they were properly tried for and lawfully convicted if guilty of the several and separate crimes charged therein, we have decided and we rule that the Appellants may properly be convicted of said several and separate crimes, as hereinafter specified. We feel particularly supported and justified in this stand that we take, by the result of the case, namely, that the prison sentence we impose does not exceed, except perhaps in actual duration, that meted out by the court below, which is life imprisonment.”

The majority resolution invokes and applies the principle of the so called pro reo in connection with Article 48 of our Revised Penal Code on complex crimes, to the effect that said article should not be applied when the resulting penalty exceeds the sum total of the several crimes committed constituting the complex crime. According to the majority, the theory of pro reo is that the principle of complex crime was adopted for the benefit of the accused and not to his prejudice; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryso, it is to be applied when the maximum of the penalty for the more serious crime is less in severity or duration of imprisonment than the sum total of the several crimes committed, but not otherwise. This is a novel theory in this jurisdiction. To my knowledge it has never been advanced before. All along and during all these years, the courts of this country not excluding this august tribunal had been applying the provisions of Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code, and its source, Article 89 of our Penal Code of 1887, regardless of whether or not the resulting penalty was prejudicial to the accused. As a matter of fact, in most cases the resulting penalty imposed by this tribunal in complex crimes was much more severe and of longer duration (imprisonment) than the sum total of the two or more crimes committed. In the numerous cases decided by this court involving the complex crime of estafa through falsification, the maximum of the penalty for the more serious crime of falsification was imposed although it exceeded the total of the penalties for estafa and for falsification. In cases of rape with physical injuries the maximum of the penalty for the crime of 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.”

inserted by the amending Spanish Law of January 3, 1908 to the second paragraph of Article 90 of the Spanish Penal Code. Furthermore, when we drafted and promulgated our Revised Penal Code in 1932 (Article No. 3815) we ignored and did not accept the amendment to the Spanish Penal Code that favored one accused of a complex crime as regards the penalty, so that now our law on the subject is contained in Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code which as amended by Act No. 4000, reads as follows:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“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 such nations which consider these common crimes of murder, etc., as separate from rebellion or sedition during which they were committed, are Spain, as shown by Article 259 of its Penal Code, and the Philippines as illustrated in the cases of U.S. vs. Cabrera and People vs. Umali, supra. Groizard lists down several countries that consider common crimes committed during a rebellion or sedition as subject to prosecution:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“Codigo del Canton de Zurich.

S. 75.  Si con motivo de la sedicion o como consecuencia fueren cometidos otros delitos, estos seraan castigados conforme a las disposiciones penales para los mismos fijadas.

“Codigo de Peru.

ART. 145.  Los reos de rebelion, sedicion o asonada son responsables de los delitos especiales que cometen, observandose lo dispuesto en el Articulo 45.

ART. 146.  Si no pudiese averiguarse quien de los sublevados cometio el delito especial, se hara responsable a los autores del tumulto.

“Codigo del Chile.

ART. 131.  Los delitos particulares cometidos en un sublevacion o con motivo de ella, seran castigados respectavamente con las penad designadas para ellos, no obstante le dispuesto en el articulo 129. — Si no pueden decubrirse los autores, seran considerados y penados como complices de tales delitos los jefes principales o subalternos de los sublevados que hallandose en la posibilidad de impedirlos no lo hubieren hecho.

“Codigo del Paraguay.

ART. 380.  Los delitos particulares cometidos en la sedicion o con motivo de ella, seran castigados con la pena que les corresponda por las leyes respectivas.

“Codigo de la Republica Argentina.

ART. 231.  Los que cometen delitos comunes con motivo de la rebelion motin o asonada o con ocasion de ella, seran castigados con la pena que corresponde a esos delitos.

“Codigo de Honduras.

ART. 224.  (Como el nuestro.)

(Groizard, El Codigo Penal de 1870, Vol. 3, Articulo 259, p. 650.)

In justice to the Defendants-Appellants in the present case, I wish to explain and make clear that in mentioning and describing the serious crimes of murder, robbery, arson, kidnapping, etc., alleged to have been committed in the course of the rebellion or by reason thereof, I am not referring particularly to the charge or charges and counts alleged against them. Their case is now pending appeal in this tribunal and their guilt or innocence of said charges or counts will be decided in due time. And so, I am not imputing or attributing to them the serious violations of law I have mentioned in this opinion. Rather, I am making general reference to the informations filed in other cases, especially in the informations against Luis Taruc and William Pomeroy which case is not only decided but also is closed.

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.

Judging by the numerous acts of atrocity contained in the several informations filed against the rebels in different cases, not only government soldiers and officers, but innocent civilians by the hundreds were murdered. Stores and homes were looted; chan roblesvirtualawlibrarynot only public buildings, like presidencias and government hospitals, but also private buildings and homes were burned to the ground. And as a result of these acts of terrorism, entire barrios were abandoned and landowners, especially owners of landed estates, evacuated to the provincial capitals or to the cities for personal security. And it seems that these acts of banditry and pillage still continue though on a smaller scale.

Settled public policy or the policy of the Government as regards rebellion and the crimes against persons and property committed by the rebels is clear. With their taxes, the citizens are maintaining a large army to put down the rebellion. Substantial rewards ranging from P500 to P100,000 are offered for the apprehension of the rebels, specially the leaders. A rebel leader with a P100,000 price on his head, after a campaign of several years by the army, and after the loss of lives of many soldiers and civilian guides, is finally captured. The government pays down the P100,000 to those responsible for the capture and charges him with the complex crime of rebellion with multiple murder, kidnapping, etc., — a capital offense. Pending trial, he asks to be released on bail and under the doctrine being laid down by us, he is set at liberty, free to go back to the hills to resume his dissident activities where he left off, by merely posting a bond corresponding to a maximum imprisonment of twelve years (P12,000) and a fine the amount of which is left to the discretion of the trial court. If he jumps his bail and assuming that the full amount of the bond is confiscated, still, the Government which paid P100,000 for his capture is the loser. It will have to wage another campaign to recapture him and perhaps offer another reward for his apprehension. This would illustrate the wide divergence between the policy of the Government and the present ruling of the Court. That is not as it should be. The three departments of the Government, the Executive, the Legislative and the Judicial Department, though independent of each other, should function as a team, harmoniously, and in cooperation, all for the public welfare. They cannot work at cross purposes. All three should be guided by the settled public policy of the state and this applies to the courts. In the case of Rubi vs. provincial board of Mindoro, 39 Phil., pp. 718-19, this court speaking about the relation between interpretation of the law by the courts and public policy, said:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

“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.’

“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 court’s 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.”

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.

For the foregoing reasons, I dissent.

Endencia, JJ., concurs.

 

LABRADOR, J., dissenting:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

I fully agree with the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Montemayor in so far as he holds that the complex crime of rebellion with murder exists under our law. I also concur with the opinion of Mr. Justice Padilla in so far as he holds that the petition for bail should be denied because of the danger that the release of the Petitioner-Appellant may cause to the security of the State. As the Appellant has been convicted by the Court of First Instance, he may be admitted to bail in the sound discretion of the court. In the interest of security the discretion should not be exercised in favor of the granting of bail.

 

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 Peña (Vol. 1, p. 289).

  4.  In the language of the information.

  1.  Article 135, Revised Penal Code.

  *  85 Phil., 307.




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July-1956 Jurisprudence                 

  • [G.R. No. L-8194. July 11, 1956.] EMERENCIANA M. VDA. DE MEDINA, ET AL., Plaintiffs-Appellees, vs. GUILLERMO CRESENCIA, ET AL., Defendants. GUILLERMO CRESENCIA, Appellant.

  • [G.R. No. L-9575. July 17, 1956.] PEDRO CEREZO, Petitioner, vs. HONORABLE EMANUEL. M. MU�OZ, Judge Court of First Instance of Pangasinan and PEDRO S. SISON, Respondents.

  • [G.R. Nos. L-6025-26. July 18, 1956.] THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. AMADO V. HERNANDEZ, ET AL., Defendants-Appellants.

  • [G.R. No. L-6990. July 20, 1956.] THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, Plaintiff-Appellant, vs. KAMAD ARINSO, Defendant-Appellee.

  • [G.R. Nos. L-7872-73. July 20, 1956.] IN RE PETITION FOR NATURALIZATION OF RAYMUNDO PE and FORTUNATO PE. RAYMUNDO PE and FORTUNATO PE, Petitioners-Appellees, vs. REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES, Oppositor-Appellant.

  • [G.R. No. L-8750. July 20, 1956.] NATIONAL UNION OF PRINTING WORKERS, Petitioners, vs. ENCLOSED WITH PAY THE ASIA PRINTING AND/OR LU MING, ET AL., Respondents.

  • [G.R. No. L-7578. July 24, 1956.] CRISPULO MALICSE, Petitioner, vs. COLLECTOR OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent.

  • [G.R. No. L-8753. July 24, 1956.] MRS. CARIDAD DE LA CRUZ DE BERONILLA, Petitioner, vs. THE HONORABLE SEGUNDO M. MARTINEZ, Judge of the Court of First Instance of Pangasinan and MELCHOR BERONILLA, Respondents.

  • [G.R. No. L-8878. July 24, 1956.] FELIPE B. OLLADA, Petitioner, vs. THE COURT OF TAX APPEALS, SECRETARY OF FINANCE, UNDER-SECRETARY OF FINANCE, COLLECTOR OF INTERNAL REVENUE, VICENTE I. CRUZ, SABINA R. SORIANO, NEW WORLD PRINTING PRESS and YAM NAN, Respondents.

  • [G.R. No. L-8604. July 25, 1956.] CANDIDO PANCHO, ET AL., Petitioners, vs. MANUEL VILLANUEVA, ET AL., Respondents.

  • [G.R. No. L-5079. July 31, 1956.] J. M. TUASON & Co., INC., represented by its managing partner THE GREGORIO ARANETA, INC., Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. GERONIMO SANTIAGO, ELENO SANTIAGO PABLO SANTIAGO, CECILIO SANTIAGO and CONSTANTINO SANTIAGO, Defendants-Appellants.

  • [G.R. No. L-6204. July 31, 1956.] CAPITOL SUBDIVISION, INC., Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. PROVINCE OF NEGROS OCCIDENTAL, Defendant-Appellant.

  • [G.R. No. L-7834. July 31, 1956.] SEVERINO D. VALENCIA and CATALINA S. L. VALENCIA, Petitioners, vs. ROMAN LEONCIO and THE COURT OF APPEALS, Respondents.

  • [G.R. No. L-7983. July 31, 1956.] PETRA BELTRAN, ET ALS., Plaintiffs-Appellants, vs. ARSENIO ESCUDERO, ET ALS., Defendants-Appellees.

  • [G.R. No. L-8157. July 31, 1956.] LIM HU, Petitioner-Appellee, vs. CENTRAL BANK OF THE PHILIPPINES, ET AL., Respondents-Appellants.

  • [G.R. No. L-8475. July 31, 1956.] RICARDO Y. SUNGA, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. VlCTORlANO ALVlAR, Defendant-Appellant.

  • [G.R. No. L-8583. July 31, 1956.] THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. FRANCISCO HILVANO, Defendant-Appellant.

  • [G.R. No. L-8627. July 31, 1956.] VITALIANO ROBLES, ET AL., Petitioners-Appellants, vs. CANDIDA SAN JOSE, ET AL., Respondents-Appellees.

  • [G.R. No. L-8657. July 31, 1956.] ERASMO ALVAREZ and MARCIANO PARANADA, Petitioners, vs. HONORABLE LUCAS LACSON, Judge of the Court of First Instance of Zambales, CASIANO A. LADIORAY and SERAPIO ARIMBUANGA, Respondents.

  • [G.R. No. L-8761. July 31, 1956.] INSULAR SAW MILL, INC., Petitioner, vs. CHARLIE HOGAN and DEE C. TAM (As partners in the unregistered partnership Charlie Hogan and Co., doing business under the name and style of �Ganie Enterprises�), Respondents.

  • [G.R. No. L-8943. July 31, 1956.] JOSE MIRANDA, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. MALATE GARAGE & TAXICAB, INC., Defendant-Appellant.

  • [G.R. No. L-8964. July 31, 1956.] JUAN EDADES, Plaintiff-Appellant, vs. SEVERINO EDADES, ET AL., Defendants-Appellees.

  • [G.R. No. L-9037. July 31, 1956.] MARIANO B. VILLANUEVA and CONSUELO PAPA-VILLANUEVA, Petitioners, vs. HONORABLE PRIMITIVO GONZALES, Judge of the Court of First Instance, and Provincial Fiscal MARIANO B. BENEDICTO, both of Cavite, Respondents.

  • [G.R. No. L-9252. July 31, 1956.] REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES, Petitioner, vs. ERNESTO P. HERNANDO, ETC., ET AL., Respondents.

  • [G.R. No. L-9284. July 31, 1956.] TERESA FELIX VDA. DE ROSARIO, Petitioner-Appellant, vs. JUSTICE OF THE PEACE OF CAMILING, TARLAC, MELANIO ROSARIO and MARIA INOVEJAS, Respondents-Appellees.

  • [G.R. No. L-9317. July 31, 1956.] AGAPITO CRUZ CORREA, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. HERMOGENES PASCUAL, Defendant. JUAN LUCIANO and ARSENIA DE LEON, movants-Appellants.

  • [G.R. No. L-9572. July 31, 1956.] JOAQUIN GUZMAN, Petitioner, vs. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS, Respondent.

  • [G.R. No. L-9667. July 31, 1956.] LUIS MA. ARANETA, Petitioner, vs. HONORABLE HERMOGENES CONCEPCION, as judge of the Court of First Instance of Manila, Branch VI and EMMA BENITEZ ARANETA, Respondents.