Slu Sagsago Notes Crim Law Sophia Legis 1
Slu Sagsago Notes Crim Law Sophia Legis 1
Slu Sagsago Notes Crim Law Sophia Legis 1
punishment.
Cages are like asylums, jails like
hospitals. They are there to segregate the offenders
from the good members of society.
Penalty is to be imposed only upon the
recommendation of social scientists, psychologists and
experts. The penalty is imposed on a case to case basis
after examination of the offender by a panel of social
scientists which do not include lawyers as the panel
would not want the law to influence their
consideration.
The emphasis is on the individual.
Eclectic or Mixed Theory
This combines both positivist and classical thinking.
Crimes that are economic and social and nature should
be dealt with in a positivist manner; thus, the law is
more compassionate. Heinous crimes should be dealt
with in a classical manner; thus, capital punishment.
Utilitarian Theory
A man is punished only if he is proved to be an actual
or potential danger to society.
The primary purpose of the punishment under criminal
law is the protection of society from actual and
potential wrongdoers.
The courts, therefore, in
exacting retribution for the wronged society, should
direct the punishment to potential or actual
wrongdoers, since criminal law is directed against acts
and omissions which the society does not approve.
Consistent with this theory, the mala prohibita principle
which punishes an offense regardless of malice or
criminal intent, should not be utilized to apply the full
harshness of the special law.
Theory to Which the Philippines Adhere
1.
2.
3.
CLASSICAL
POSITIVIST
The basis of
criminal liability
is human fee
will and the
purpose of the
penalty
is
retribution.
That man is
subdued
occasionally by
a strange and
morbid
phenomenon
which constrains
him to do wrong
in spite of or
contrary to his
volition.
That crime is
essentially
a
social
and
natural
phenomenon,
and as such, it
cannot
be
treated
and
checked by the
application
of
abstract
principles of law
and
jurisprudence
nor
by
the
imposition of a
punishment,
fixed
and
determined
a
priori;
rather
through
the
enforcement of
individual
measures
in
each particular
case.
That man is
essentially
a
moral creature
with
an
absolute
free
will to choose
between good
and
evil,
thereby placing
more
stress
upon the effect
or result of the
felonious
act
done upon the
man,
the
criminal himself.
It
has
endeavored to
establish
a
mechanical and
direct
proportion
between crime
and penalty.
There is a scant
regard to the
human element.
POWER TO ENACT PENAL LAWS
MIXED/
ECLECTIC
This
combines
both
positivist
and
classical
thinking.
2.
3.
Heinous crimes
should be dealt
with in a classical
manner,
thus
capital
punishment.
Penal
laws
must
be
GENERAL
IN
APPLICATION/equal application to all. Otherwise, it
would violate the equal protection clause of the
constitution.
Penal laws must not partake of the nature of
an EX POST FACTO LAW.
Makes criminal an act done before the passage
of the law and which was innocent when done,
and punishes such an act.
Aggravates a crime, or makes it greater than it
was, when committed.
Changes the punishment and inflicts a greater
punishment than the law annexed to the crime
when committed.
Alters the legal rules on evidence, and
authorizes conviction upon less or different
testimony than the law required at the time of
the commission of the offense.
Assuming to regulate civil rights and remedies
only in effect imposes penalty or deprivation of
a right for something which when done was
lawful.
Deprives a person accused of a crime some
lawful protection to which he has become
entitled, such as the protection of a
proclamation of amnesty.
Penal laws must not partake of the nature of a
bill of attainder.
BILL OF ATTAINDER - is a legislative act which
inflicts punishment without trial. Its essence is the
substitution of a legislative act for a judicial
determination of guilt.
4.
found guilty.
This is punished by reclusion
perpetua to death. Assuming you were the judge,
would you give the accused the benefit of the
Indeterminate Sentence Law (ISLAW)? The ISLAW
does not apply when the penalty imposed is life
imprisonment or death. Would you consider the
penalty imposable or the penalty imposed, taking
into consideration the mitigating circumstance of
minority?
3.
4. No interpretation by analogy.
REPEAL OF PENAL LAWS
1.
1.
2.
3.
2.
b.
c.
d.
2.
GENERALITY
Penal laws and those of public security and safety
shall be obligatory upon all who live or sojourn in
Philippine territory. (Art 14, NCC) In other words,
it applies to all persons within the country
regardless of their race, belief, sex, or creed. This
answers the question: who are bound by the law?
To whom is the penal law applicable? They may be
2.
a.
b.
TERRITORIALITY
GENERAL RULE: Penal laws are applicable or
enforceable only within the limits of the territorial
jurisdiction of the authority which enacted the law.
Thus, ordinances are enforceable only within the
territorial limits of the city/municipality which
enacted them, while laws of national application
are enforceable only within Philippine territory.
Intraterritorial Application refers to the
application of the RPC within the Philippine
territory.
In the intraterritorial application of the RPC, Article
2 makes it clear that it does not refer only to
Philippine archipelago but it also includes the
atmosphere, interior waters and maritime zone.
So whenever you use the word territory, do not
limit this to land area only.
As far as jurisdiction or application of the RPC over
crimes committed on maritime zones or interior
waters, the Archipelagic Rule shall be observed.
So the three-mile limit on our shoreline has been
modified by the rule. Any crime committed in
interior
waters
comprising
the
Philippine
archipelago shall be subject to our laws although
committed on board a foreign merchant vessel.
A vessel is considered a Philippine ship only when
it is registered in accordance with Philippine laws.
Under international law, as long as such vessel is
not within the territorial waters of a foreign
country, Philippine laws shall govern.
Thus:
c.
d.
e.
2.
EXCEPTIONS:
a.
b.
Principle
of
Ex
Territoriality
in
International Law penal laws apply to
offenses committed within the premises of the
Philippines which are considered extensions of
Philippine Territory.
Principle of Extraterritoriality under
Article 2, RPC (binding on crimes even
committed outside the Phils.)
1. Offenses committed while on a Philippine
ship or airship
REQUISITES
a. Ship or airship must not be within the
territorial jurisdiction of another
country
b. Ship/airship must be registered in the
Phils.
Phil ship
In Phil
Out Phil
Territorialit Extray
Territoriality
-commercial
ship
-if in a) High
Seas or b)
territorial
waters
of
foreign
country [(b)
is subj to
principle
of
comity,i.e.
foreign
country given
priority
to
exercise
jurisdiction]
(extraterritori
ality
is
applicable in
(b) if the
foreign
country
adopts French
Rule
Exc. affects
security,
peace & order
Principle
PIL
-warship
of
Foreign ship
In Phil
Out Phil
RPC:
-- French:
unregistere nationality
d/
Exc
pirate ship
affects
security,
NOT RPC:
peace &
-warship
order
RPC
(territorialit
y)
-merchant
vessel
-Phil
is
point
of
destination
NOT RPC
-merchant
vessel
-passing in
transit
Exc. Affects
security,
peace
&
order
English:
Territoriali
ty
Exc.
internal
10
e.
f.
g.
h.
i.
j.
k.
l.
Illustration:
A Philippine consulate official who is
validly married here in the Philippines and
who marries again in a foreign country
cannot be prosecuted here for bigamy
because this is a crime not connected with
his official duties. However, if the second
marriage was celebrated within the
Philippine embassy, he may be prosecuted
here, since it is as if he contracted the
marriage here in the Philippines.
Q: A consul was to take a deposition in a
hotel in Singapore. After the deposition,
the deponent approached the consuls
daughter and requested that certain parts
of the deposition be changed in
consideration for $10,000.00.
The
daughter persuaded the consul and the
latter agreed. Will the crime be subject to
the Revised Penal Code? If so, what
crime or crimes have been committed?
country.
Under the Rules of Court,
however, a consul can take depositions or
letters rogatory. There is, therefore, a
definite provision of the law making it the
consuls function to take depositions.
When he agreed to the falsification of the
deposition, he was doing so as a public
officer in the service of the Philippine
government.
5.
11
CLASSIFICATION OF FELONIES
1. According to their Inherent Nature
3.
12
intent as an
element
As to degree of
accomplishment
of the crime
element.
immaterial.
The degree of
accomplishment
of the crime is
taken
into
account
in
punishing
the
offender. Thus,
there
are
attempted,
frustrated, and
consummated
stages in the
commission of a
crime.
As to mitigating
and
aggravating
circumstances
Mitigating
and
aggravating
circumstances
are taken into
account
in
imposing
the
penalty.
When there are
more than one
offender,
the
degree
of
participation of
each
in
the
commission
of
the
crime is
taken
into
account
of
imposing
the
penalty.
Thus
offenders
are
classified
as
principals,
accomplice, and
accessory.
Generally, RPC is
violated.
Mitigating
and
aggravating
circumstances
are not taken
into account in
imposing
the
penalty.
The degree of
participation of
any offender is
not considered.
All
who
perpetrated the
prohibited
act
are penalized to
the same extent.
There
is
no
principal
or
accomplice
or
accessory
to
consider.
As to degree of
participation
As to basis of
criminal liability
Criminal liability
Is based on the
moral trait of the
offender, that is
why
liability
would only arise
when there is
dolo or culpa in
commission
of
the punishable
act.
Good faith or
lack of criminal
intent is a valid
defense,
UNLESS
the
crime
is
the
result of culpa.
Intent
is
an
As to use of
good faith as a
defense
As to use of
13
MALA
PROHIBITA
Wrong because
it is prohibited by
law
The moral trait
of the offender is
not considered, it
is enough that
the
prohibited
act be voluntarily
done.
As to what laws
are violated
Generally,
Special Laws are
violated.
Criminal intent is
3.
b.
14
Negligence as a Felony
15
Culpable
Not malicious
Injury
caused
is
unintentional being incident
of another act performed
without malice
Wrongful act results from
imprudence,
negligence,
lack of foresight, lack of skill
Discussion Below)
1. Attempted Felonies
2. Frustrated Felonies
3. Consummated Felonies
Notes:
Where a penalty of imprisonment is provided
whether as a joint or alternative penalty to fine, it
is the basis for the classification.
16
offense
is
always
c.
17
2.
18
Exceptions:
1. When it is an essential element of a crime as
in libel and malicious mischief, direct assault,
political crimes
2. When the evidence against the accused is
purely circumstantial. (JBL)
3. When there is doubt as to the identity of the
accused (JBL)
4. When the act produces several crimes as in
entering the estate of another, motive is
necessary to determine whether the offense is
trespass, vagrancy or theft.
5. When it is necessary to ascertain the truth
between 2 antagonistic theories or versions of
the killing. L(JBL)
6. When the identification of the accused
proceeds from an unreliable source and the
testimony is inconclusive and not free from
doubt. (JBL)
7. When there are no eyewitnesses to the crime,
and where suspicion is likely to fall upon a
number of persons. (JBL)
If intentional, a crime
cannot be committed
without intent. Intent is
manifested
by
the
instrument used by the
offender. It is an element
of a felony except in
cases of culpa.
A matter of criminal law.
19
INTENT
Purpose
to
use
a
particular means to bring
about a desired result
(not a state of mind, not
a reason for committing a
crime)
b.
c.
d.
Illustrations:
In a case decided by the Supreme Court, two
persons went wild boar hunting. On their way,
they met Pedro standing by the door of his house
and they asked him where they could find wild
boars. Pedro pointed to a place where wild boars
were supposed to be found, and the two
proceeded thereto. Upon getting to the place,
they saw something moving, they shot,
unfortunately the bullet ricocheted killing Pedro. It
was held that since there was neither dolo nor
culpa, there is no criminal liability.
In US v. Bindoy, accused had an altercation
with X. X snatched the bolo from the accused. To
prevent X from using his bolo on him, accused
tried to get it from X.
Upon pulling it back
towards him, he hit someone from behind,
instantly killing the latter. The accused was found
to be not liable. In criminal law, there is pure
accident, and the principle damnum absque injuria
is also honored.
Article 4. Criminal liability
Criminal liability shall be incurred:
1.
2.
20
21
22
Illustrations:
A thought of killing B. He positioned himself at
one corner where B would usually pass. When
a figure resembling B was approaching, A hid
and when that figure was near him, he
suddenly hit him with a piece of wood on the
nape, killing him. But it turned out that it was
his own father.
The crime committed is
parricide, although what was intended was
homicide. Article 49, therefore, will apply
because out of a mistake in identity, a crime
was committed different from that which was
intended.
In another instance, A thought of killing B.
Instead of B, C passed. A thought that he
was B, so he hit C on the neck, killing the
latter. Just the same, the crime intended to
be committed is homicide and what was
committed is actually homicide, Article 49 does
not apply. Here, error in personae is of no
effect.
3. Praeter Intentionem / Consequence went
beyond the Intention
Illustrations:
In People v. Gacogo, 53 Phil 524, two
persons quarreled. They had fist blows. The
other started to run away and Gacogo went
after him, struck him with a fist blow at the
back of the head. Because the victim was
running, he lost balance, he fell on the
pavement and his head struck the cement
pavement. He suffered cerebral hemorrhage.
Although Gacogo claimed that he had no
intention of killing the victim, his claim is
useless. Intent to kill is only relevant when
the victim did not die. This is so because the
purpose of intent to kill is to differentiate the
crime of physical injuries from the crime of
attempted homicide or attempted murder or
frustrated homicide or frustrated murder. But
once the victim is dead, you do not talk of
intent to kill anymore. The best evidence of
intent to kill is the fact that victim was killed.
Although Gacogo was convicted for homicide
for the death of the person, he was given the
benefit of paragraph 3 of Article13, that is, "
that the offender did not intend to commit so
grave a wrong as that committed.
A stabbed his friend when they had a drinking
spree eleven times. His defense is that he had
no intention of killing his friend. He did not
intend to commit so grave a wrong as that
committed. It was held that the fact that 11
wounds were inflicted on A's friend is hardly
compatible with the idea that he did not intend
to commit so grave a wrong that committed.
In another instance, the accused was a
homosexual.
The victim ridiculed or
humiliated him while he was going to the
restroom. He was so irritated that he just
stabbed the victim at the neck with a ladys
comb with a pointed handle, killing the victim.
His defense was that he did not intend to
commit so grave a wrong as that of killing him.
23
24
A: Yes. With the new rape law amending the RPC and
classifying rape as a crime against persons, it is now
possible that an impossible crime was committed.
Note, however, that the crime might also fall under the
Revised Administrative Code desecrating the dead.
25
26
27
STAGES OF EXECUTION
1. ATTEMPTED - when the offender commences the
commission of a felony directly by overt acts, and
does not perform all the acts of execution which
should produce the felony by reason of some
cause or accident other than his own spontaneous
desistance.
ELEMENTS:
a. the offender commences the commission of
the felony directly by overt acts;
b. he does not perform all the acts of execution
which should produce the felony;
c. the non-performance of all acts of execution
was due to cause or accident other than his
spontaneous desistance.
Overt or external act - is some physical deed or
activity, indicating the intention to commit a
particular crime, more than a mere planning or
preparation, which if carried out to its complete
termination following its natural course, without
being frustrated by external obstacles nor by the
voluntary desistance of the perpetrator, will
logically and necessarily ripen into a concrete
offense.
Felony is Deemed Commenced by Overt Act
when the ff are present:
a. That there be external acts;
b. Such external acts have direct connection with
the crime intended to be committed.
The accused has not yet passed the SUBJECTIVE
PHASE or that phase encompassed from the time
an act is executed which begins the commission of
the crime until the time of the performance of the
last act necessary to produce the crime, but where
the accused has still control over his actions and
their results.
The accused was not able to continue performing
the acts to produce the crime. He was prevented
by external forces and not because he himself
chose not to continue. Such as when his weap0n
was snatched, or his intended victim managed to
escape, or he was overpowered or arrested.
28
c)
b.
c.
d.
Kinds of Desistance
1. Legal Desistance the desistance referred to
in law which would obviate criminal liability
unless the overt or preparatory acts already
committed in themselve constitute a felony
other than what the actor intended. It is made
during the attempted stage.
2. Factual Desistance actual desistance of the
actor which is made after the attempted stage
of the crime; the actor is still liable for the
attempt.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Attempted or Frustrated
Homicide/murder. Where the accused, with intent
to kill, injured the victim but the latter did not die,
when is the crime attempted or frustrated?
1. First View: The subjective phase doctrine. If
at that point where the accused has still
control over the results of his actions but is
stopped by reason outside of his own
desistance and the subjective phase has not
been passed, the offense is attempted
2. Second View: The Mortal Wound or Life
Threatening Injury Doctrine: If a mortal
wound or life threatening injury had been
inflicted, the offense is frustrated, else it is
attempted ( Palaganas vs. PP., Sept. 12, 2006)
3. Third View: The belief of the accused should
be considered in that if the accused believed
he has done all which is necessary to produce
death, then it is frustrated.
29
1.
2.
Arson
3.
7.
ATTEMP
TED
FRUSTRA
TED
CONSUMM
ATED
Evil intent
is
not
accomplis
hed
Evil intent
is possible
of
accomplis
hment
Overt acts
of
execution
are
started.
Not
all
acts
of
execution
are
present.
Due
to
reasons
other
than
spontane
ous
desistanc
e of the
perpetrat
or.
Evil intent
is
not
accomplish
ed
Evil intent
is possible
of
accomplish
ment
All acts of
execution
are
present.
Evil intent is
accomplished
The
result
sought
is
achieved
All acts of
execution are
present.
Due
to
intervening
causes
independe
nt of the
will of the
perpetrator
.
IMPOSSI
BLE
CRIME
Evil intent
is
not
accomplish
ed
Evil intent
is
not
possible of
accomplish
ment
All acts of
execution
are
present.
Evil intent
cannot be
accomplish
ed because
its
inherently
impossible
of
accomplish
ment
or
the means
employed
by
the
offender is
inadequate
or
ineffectual.
30
31
b.
c.
d.
a.1.
a.2.
a.3.
32
Illustrations:
A, B, C and D came to an agreement to commit
rebellion. Their agreement was to bring about the
rebellion on a certain date. Even if none of them
has performed the act of rebellion, there is already
criminal liability arising from the conspiracy to
commit the rebellion. But if anyone of them has
committed the overt act of rebellion, the crime of
all is no longer conspiracy to commit rebellion but
rebellion itself. This subsists even though the
other co-conspirator does not know that one of
them had already done the act of rebellion.
A thought of having her husband killed because
the latter was maltreating her. She hired some
persons to kill him and pointed at her husband.
The goons got hold of her husband and started
mauling him. The wife took pity and shouted for
them to stop but the goons continued. The wife
ran away. The wife was prosecuted for parricide.
But the Supreme Court said that there was
desistance so she is not criminally liable.
2. Conspiracy as a manner or incurring criminal
liability - this presupposes that a crime was
actually committed by two or more persons who
agreed to its commission and who performed acts
to bring about the crime. This agreement and
cooperation is the conspiracy which serves as the
basis to make all equally liable under the principle
that the act of one is the act of all. There must
be an overt act done before the co-conspirators
become criminally liable.
Kinds:
a. Express - conspirators meet and plan prior to
the execution; participants are conspirators
prior to the commission of the crime.
b.
Illustration:
A, B and C agreed to kill D. When they saw the
opportunity, A, B and C killed D and after that, A
and B ran into different directions. C inspected the
pocket of the victim and found that the victim was
wearing a ring a diamond ring and he took it.
The crimes committed are homicide and theft. As
far as the homicide is concerned, A, B and C are
liable because that was agreed upon and theft was
not an integral part of homicide. This is a distinct
crime so the rule will not apply because it was not
the crime agreed upon. Insofar as the crime of
theft is concerned, C will be the only one liable. So
C will be liable for homicide and theft.
Exception to the exception: When the act
constitutes an indivisible offense (e.g. composite
crime).
In case the crime committed is a composite crime,
the conspirator will be liable for all the acts
committed during the commission of the crime
agreed upon. This is because, in the eyes of the
law, all those acts done in pursuance of the crime
agreed upon are acts which constitute a single
crime.
Illustrations:
A, B, and C decided to commit robbery in the
house of D. Pursuant to their agreement, A would
ransack the second floor, B was to wait outside,
and C would stay on the first floor. Unknown to B
and C, A raped the girl upstairs. All of them will be
liable for robbery with rape. The crime committed
is robbery with rape, which is not a complex crime,
but an indivisible felony under the Article 294 of
the Revised Penal Code. Even if B and C did not
know that rape was being committed and they
agreed only and conspired to rob, yet rape was
part of robbery. Rape can not be separated from
robbery.
A, B and C agreed to rob the house of D. It was
agreed that A would go the second floor, B would
stay in the first floor, and C stands guard outside.
All went to their designated areas in pursuit of the
plan. While A was ransacking the second floor, the
owner was awakened. A killed him. A, B and C
will be liable for robbery with homicide. This is
because, it is well settled that any killing taking
place while robbery is being committed shall be
treated as a single indivisible offense.
Conspirators Liable as Principals
33
1.
Effect of Conspiracy
2.
Conspiracy by Adoption.
Proof of Conspiracy
34
a.
Elements
Crimes
(The
crimes in which
conspiracy and
proposal
are
punishable are
against
the
security of the
state
or
economic
security)
Conspiracy
to
commit treason,
rebellion,
sedition,
coup
detat, highway
robbery,
espionage,
direct
bribery
and arson.
When exist
Once
proposal
accepted,
conspiracy
arises.
Conspiracy as a
Means to commit a
crime
Overt
acts
are
necessary
to
incur
criminal liability.
Offenders are punished
for the crime itself.
Conspiracy
Agreement
to
commit a felony
and decide to
commit it.
the
was
a
It is bilateral for
it requires two
parties.
Proposal
Person decides
to commit a
crime
and
proposes
the
same
to
another.
Proposal
to
commit treason,
rebellion, coup
detat.
*no proposal to
commit sedition
Is true only up
to the point
where the party
to whom the
proposal
was
made has not
yet accepted the
proposal.
It is unilateral,
one party makes
a proposition to
the other.
Requisites of proposal:
1.
that a person has decided to commit a felony;
and
2.
that he proposes its execution to some other
person or persons.
NOTE: It is not necessary that the person to whom
the proposal is made agrees to commit treason or
rebellion.
There is no criminal proposal when:
1.
the person who proposes is not determined to
commit the felony.
2.
there is no decided, concrete and formal
proposal.
3.
it is not the execution of the felony that is
proposed.
35
gravity)
a.
c.
(b)
36
37
Attempted or
Frustrated
Stages
Plea of Guilty
as Mitigating
Circumstance
Minimum,
Medium, and
Maximum
Periods.
Penalty for
Accesory or
Accomplice
Prision
correccional,
prision mayor,
etc
Punsihable
Special Penal
Laws
Imprisonment
Applicable
Applicable
NA
Applicable.
Gen. Rule: NA
Exception: Unless
stated otherwise.
Chapter 2
JUSTIFYING CIRCUMSTANCES AND
CIRCUMSTANCES, WHICH EXEMPT FROM
CRIMINAL LIABILITY
IMPUTABILITY the quality by which an act may be
ascribed to a person as its author or owner. It implies
that the act committed has been freely and consciously
done and may therefore be put down to the doer as his
very own.
RESPONSIBILITY the obligation of suffering the
consequences of crime. It is the obligation of taking the
penal and civil consequences of the crime.
GUILT an element of responsibility, for a man cannot
be made to answer for the consequences of a crime
unless he is guilty.
CIRCUMSTANCES
AFFECTING
LIABILITY, CLASSIFICATIONS:
I.
CRIMINAL
c.
d.
38
AND
c.
B. As to Effect:
1. Total or Perfect - those the effect of which
will totally exonerate the accused.
Example:
a
complete
justifying
circumstance, amnesty.
2. Partial - those which are intended to lessen
the liability of the accused. They include
proof the offense is a lesser offenses, or
that it is of a lower stage of execution,
that the accused has a lower participation
and is not the principal.
C. As to source:
1. Legal - those provided for by statutes or
by the constitution. For example:
prescription of crimes, marriage of the
offender and offended, pardon, double
jeopardy, amnesty.
2. Factual - those based on the circumstances
of the commission of the crime relating to
the time, place, manner of commission;
identification of the accused; reasons for
39
d.
901).
2. The defense of property rights, only if there is also
389).
Elements:
1. Unlawful aggression;
2. reasonable necessity of the means employed
to repel it; and
3. lack of sufficient provocation on the part of the
person defending himself.
40
41
42
3.
43
of the killing?
A: In The Genosa case, it was ruled that the
accused was not entitled to complete
exoneration because there was no unlawful
aggression, no immediate and unexpected attack
on her at the time she shot him. But the severe
beatings repeatedly inflicted constituted a form
of cumulative psychological paralysis: diminished
her will power, thereby entitling her to the
mitigating factor under paragraphs 9 and 10 of
Article 13.
HOWEVER, RA 9262 has liberalized it in view of
the provisions which reads: notwithstanding
the absence for the elements of self defense
Paragraph 2. Defense of Relative
Anyone who acts in defense of the person or rights
of his spouse, ascendants, descendants, or legitimate,
natural, or adopted brothers or sisters or of his
relatives by affinity
in the same degrees, and
those by consanguinity within the fourth civil degree,
provided that the first and second requisites prescribed
in the next preceding circumstance are present, and
the further requisite, in case the provocation was given
by the person attacked, that the one making defense
had no part therein.
1.
2.
3.
Unlawful Aggression;
Reasonable necessity of the means employed to
repel it; and
In case the provocation was given by the person
attacked, that the one making defense had no part
therein.
Elements
44
45
Illustrations:
When injuries are inflicted on a suspect who resists a
valid arrest
Shooting an escaping prisoner in order to immobilize
and prevent his escape, even if the shooting resulted to
his death. But not shooting him again after he was
already immobilized, or he gives up.
Killing of rebels by soldiers is not homicide or murder;
or destruction of private property in a firefight between
rebels/criminals and soldiers/law enforcers.
Amputation of patients by physicians in order to save
their lives.
Lawyers calling witnesses as liars are not liable for
defamation or unjust vexation.
Scolding lazy students by teachers is not defamation.
Executioners are not criminally liable.
A lawyer who writes a reply-letter describing the
adverse party as untruthful and hypocrite.
Application in Relation to Law Enforcers Who
Used Force and kill or Injure Suspects/accused
1. Cabanlig vs. Sandiganbayan ( July 28, 2005)
FACTS: A suspect who was onboard a police
vehicle, suddenly grabbed the armalite rifle of one
of the policemen and jumped from the vehicle. One
of the policemen shouted hoy and the accused
policeman simultaneously shot the suspect three
times resulting to the death of the suspect. Is he
policeman liable for the death of the victim?
.
HELD: No. He acted in lawful performance of duty.
A policeman in the performance of duty is justified
in using force as is reasonably necessary to secure
and detain the offender, over come his resistance,
prevent escape, recapture him if necessary and
protect himself form bodily injury. In case injury or
46
Illustration:
In People v. Oanis and Callanta, the accused Chief
of Police and the constabulary soldier were sent out to
arrest a certain Balagtas, supposedly a notorious
bandit. There was an order to kill Balagtas if he would
resist. The accused arrived at the house of a dancer
who was supposedly the girlfriend of Balagtas. When
they were there, they saw a certain person who
resembled Balagtas in all his bodily appearance
sleeping on a bamboo bed but facing the other
direction. The accused, without going around the
house, started firing at the man. They found out later
on that the man was not really Balagtas. They tried to
invoke the justifying circumstance of having acted in
fulfillment of a duty.
The second requisite is absent because they acted with
negligence. There was nothing that prevented them
from looking around the house and looking at the face
of the fellow who was sleeping. There could not be
any danger on their life and limb. Hence, they were
held guilty of the crime of murder because the fellow
was killed when he was sleeping and totally
defenseless. However, the Supreme Court granted
them the benefit of incomplete justification of
fulfillment of duty and the penalty was reduced by one
or two degrees.
Do not confuse fulfillment of a duty with selfdefense.
Illustration:
Subordinate
cannot
invoke
this
47
EXEMPTING
CIRCUMSTANCE
1. It affects the actor not
the act.
2. The act complained of
is actually wrongful, but
the actor is not liable.
4. Since there is
no crime, nor a
criminal, there is
also no criminal or
civil
liability.
(except Art. 11,
par. 4 - state of
necessity)
3.
Since the act
complained of is actually
wrong there is a crime
but since the actor acted
without
voluntariness,
there is no dolo nor culpa
no civil liability in
paragraphs 4 (injury
by mere accident) and
7 (lawful cause) of
Article 12.
Propositions:
a.at the time the act was committed;
b. the defendant suffers from defect of reason or
from disease of mind
c.causes defendant to not to know what is the
nature and quality of act taken or that his act
was wrong
2.
48
1.
2.
49
Without
Fault
or
Illustration:
A person who is driving his car within the speed limit,
while considering the condition of the traffic and the
pedestrians at that time, tripped on a stone with one of
his car tires. The stone flew hitting a pedestrian on the
head. The pedestrian suffered profuse bleeding. What
is the liability of the driver?
There is no civil liability under paragraph 4 of Article
12. Although, this is just an exempting circumstance,
where generally there is civil liability, yet, in paragraph
4 of Article 12, there is no civil liability as well as
criminal liability. The driver is not under obligation to
defray the medical expenses.
However, correlate paragraph 4 of Article 12 with the
second paragraph of Article 275. Article 275 gives you
the crime of abandoning the victim of ones own
accident. It is a crime. Here, the accident referred to
in paragraph 2 of Article 275 is in the concept of
paragraph 4 of Article 12. This means that the
offender must be performing a lawful act, that he was
doing it with due care but somehow, injury resulted by
mere accident without fault or intention of causing it.
If at the very beginning, the offender was negligent,
you do not apply Article 275, paragraph 2. Instead, it
will be Article 365 on criminal negligence. Notice that
in the last paragraph of Article 365, in the case of the
so-called hit and run drivers who have injured
50
Under
Exceptional
Elements of Instigation
1. Act of persuasion, trickery or fraud carried
out by law enforcers to instigate the
accused to commit the crime.
2. The origin of criminal design is in the mind
of the law enforcer not the innocent
accused. Crime is a product of creative
activity of the law enforcer.
51
Mistake Of Fact
Difference between
entrapment
instigation
and
52
2.
II.
Chapter 3
CIRCUMSTANCES WHICH MITIGATE CRIMINAL
LIABILITY
Article 13. Mitigating Circumstances
Mitigating Circumstances are those which, if
present in the commission of the crime, do not entirely
free the actor from criminal liability, but serve only to
reduce the penalty.
Note: A mitigating circumstance arising from a single
fact absorbs all the other mitigating circumstances
arising from the same fact.
53
As
nature
to
As
effect
to
As to Kinds
(sources)
3.
Ordinary
Can be offset by
generic
aggravating
circumstances
If not offset,
will operate to
reduce
the
penalty to the
minimum
period, provided
the penalty is
divisible.
those
enumerated in
subsections 110 of Article 13.
Privileged
Can never be
offset
by
aggravating
circumstances.
Operates
to
reduce
the
penalty by 1 or 2
degrees
than
that provided by
law
for
the
crime.
those mentioned
in articles 68, 69,
64.
Illustrations:
Paragraph
1.
Incomplete
Justifying
or
Exempting Circumstances
Those mentioned in the preceding chapter, when
all the requisites necessary to justify the act or to
exempt from criminal liability in the respective cases
are not attendant.
Note: This applies when some elements necessary to
justify the act or to exempt the actor are not attendant.
But in the case of incomplete self-defense, defense of
relatives, and defense of a stranger, unlawful
aggression must be present, it being an indispensable
requisite.
54
3.
4.
3.
4.
Incomplete
exempting
circumstance
of
uncontrollable fear if only one of the 2 requisites
is present, there is only a mitigating circumstance.
Note: Paragraphs 1 and 2 of Art 12 cannot give
place to mitigating because the mental condition of
a person is indivisible. BUT if the offender is
suffering from some illness which would diminish
the exercise of his will-power, without however
depriving him of consciousness of his acts, such
circumstance is considered mitigation under par 9
of Art 13.
1.
2.
A: Yes.
55
Criminal Responsibility/Effect
Absolute irresponsibility, exempting
circumstance
*as amended by RA 9344
Conditional Responsibility
Without
Discernment
not
criminally liable
With Discernment criminally liable
* as amended by RA 9344
Sentence is suspended
Deliquent
18 to 70 years
Above 70
Full Responsibility
Mitigated
Responsibility,
no
imposition
of
death
penalty,
execution of death penalty may be
suspended or commuted.
1.
2.
3.
56
Vindication
Grave offense (maybe a
crime or not but the act is
unjustifiable) may be also
be against the offenders
relatives mentioned by
law. (Broader) There must
be immediate vindication
of grave offense.
Offended party must have
done a grave offense to
the offender or his
relatives or property.
May be proximate. Time
interval allowed.
Illustration:
The accused went to a barrio dance. In that
gathering, there was a bully and he told the
accused that he is not allowed to go inside. The
accused tried to reason out but the bully slapped
57
58
Irresistible Force
Mitigating
No physical force needed
From the offender himself
Must come from lawful
sentiments
Passion and
Obfuscation
Produced by an impulse
which may be caused by
provocation
Offense which engenders
perturbation of mind need
not be immediate
Effect is loss of reason
and self-control on the
part of the offender
Exempting
Requires physical force
Must come from a 3rd
person
Unlawful
Provocation
as
59
1.
2.
3.
60
Illustrations:
In a case where the offender is deaf and dumb,
personal property was entrusted to him and he
misappropriated the same. The crime committed was
estafa. The fact that he was deaf and dumb is not
mitigating because that does not bear any relation to
the crime committed.
If a person is deaf and dumb and he has been
slandered, he cannot talk so what he did was, he got a
piece of wood and struck the fellow on the head. The
crime committed was physical injuries. The Supreme
Court held that being a deaf and dumb is mitigating
because the only way is to use his force because he
cannot strike back.
If the offender is blind in one eye, as long as his means
of action, defense or communication with others are
not restricted, such circumstance is not mitigating.
This circumstance must also have a bearing on the
crime committed and must depend on how the crime
was committed.
Paragraph 9. Illness of the Offender
Such illness of the offender as would diminish the
exercise of the will power of the offender without
however depriving him of the consciousness of his acts.
BASIS: diminution of intelligence and intent.
Requisites:
1. That the illness of the offender must diminish
the exercise of his will power.
2. That such illness should not deprive the
offender of the consciousness of his acts.
NOTES: When the offender completely lost the
exercise of will-power, it may be an exempting
circumstance.
4)
5)
the time
the personal circumstances of the offender, or
the offended party.
Classification:
1)
Generic - those that generally apply to all
crimes.
a) Advantage taken of public position;
b) Contempt or insult of public authorities;
c) Crime committed in the dwelling of the
offended party;
d) Abuse
of
confidence
or
obvious
ungratefulness;
e) Place where crime is committed;
f) Nighttime, uninhabited place, or band;
g) Recidivism (reincidencia);
h) Habituality (reiteracion);
i) Craft, fraud or disguise;
j) Unlawful entry;
k) Breaking of parts of the house;
l) Use of persons under 15 years of age.
Paragraph
10.
Similar
and
Analogous
Circumstances
And, finally, any other circumstances of a
similar nature and analogous to those above
mentioned.
NOTE: This authorizes the court to consider in favor of
the accused any other circumstance of a similar nature
and analogous to those mentioned in pars.1-9 of
Article 13.
Examples:
1. Defendant who is 60 years old with failing eyesight
is similar to a case of one over 70 years old.
2. Impulse of jealousy, similar to passion and
obfuscation.
3. Testifying for the prosecution, analogous to plea
of guilty
4. Outraged feeling of owner of animal taken for
ransom is analogous to vindication of grave
offense.
5. Voluntary restitution of property is similar to
voluntary surrender. (the suspect voluntarily leads
the police to where he hid the things he used in
the crime: analogous to voluntary surrender)
6. Extreme poverty.
Not Examples:
1. Killing the wrong person.
2. Not resisting arrest is not the same as voluntary
surrender.
3. Running amuck is not mitigating.
Chapter 4
CIRCUMSTANCES WHICH AGGRAVATE
CRIMINAL LIABILITY
Aggravating Circumstances those which, if
attendant to the commission of the crime, serve to
have the penalty imposed in its maximum period
provided by law for the offense or those that change
the nature of the crime.
BASIS: They are based on the greater perversity of
the offender manifested in the commission of the crime
as shown by:
1)
the motivating power itself
2)
the place of commission
3)
the means and ways employed
61
2)
3)
c.
d.
e.
f.
c.
GENERIC
Circumstance can be
offset by an ordinary
mitigating circumstance.
If not offset by any
mitigating circumstance,
increases the penalty to
the maximum period
without exceeding the
limit prescribed by law.
Must also be alleged in
the information.
QUALIFYING
It cannot be offset by any
mitigating circumstance
Gives the crime its proper
and exclusive name and
places the author of the
crime in such a situation
as to deserve no other
penalty than that specially
prescribed by law for said
crimes.
Must
be
specifically
alleged in the information.
If not, but proven during
the trial, it will be
considered
only
as
generic.
SOURCES
The Revised Penal Code
1. The basic source is Article 14 which enumerates the
ordinary and generic aggravating circumstances
2. As to the qualifying, special or specific aggravating,
they are found in certain specific articles in Book II
under the respective titles covering the crimes to
which they apply
3.
Examples:
(i) Art. 125 as to those which qualify piracy
62
1.
Taking
Advantage
of
Public
5.
NOTES:
1. This is now a special aggravating under R.A. 7659
(Heinous Crime Law) amending Article 62. If the
crime is Violation of the Child Abuse Law, the
penalty shall be in the maximum.
2. Applies only to an offender who is a public officer
who used the influence, prestige, or ascendancy of
his office as a means to realize his purposes or to
commit eh crime. Did he abuse his office to
commit the crime?
3. Does not apply where being a public officer is
inherent in the crime like those under the Title
Crimes By Public Officers like malversation or
falsification committed by public officers.
4. Examples: (a) A Jail Warden who orders the guard
to beat up an inmate (b) A Police officer who
orders his subordinates to steal or rob or maul (c)
a Judge who detained his debtor for contempt of
Court for refusing to obey the Judge Order for the
debtor to appear in the sala of the Judge
6.
a.
b.
c.
63
Elements:
1. the public authority is engaged in the
discharge of his duties;
2. he is not the person against whom the crime is
committed;
3. the offender knows of the identity of the public
authority; and
4. his presence has not prevented the offender
from committing the criminal act.
PUBLIC AUTHORITIES - refer to persons in authorities
and not to their agents.
NOTES:
1. Teachers and lawyers are persons in authority for
purposes of direct assault (Art. 148) and resistance
and disobedience (Art. 152) but not under this
article.
2. The public authorities are not the victims of the
crime but that the crime was committed in the
presence, view or hearing of the public authorities,
and the accused knows them to be such.
Otherwise, it will constitute direct assault.
3. Aggravating only in crimes against persons and
honor, not against property.
4. This is NOT applicable when committed in the
presence of a mere agent.
64
65
trespass to dwelling
violation of domicile.
3.
Note: Obvious
ungratefulness
or
ingratitude
presupposes that the accused was the recipient of
some gratuitous act or benevolence or liberality from
the victim for which he ought to have been grateful,
but instead he committed a crime against the said
victim.
Examples: the accused pick pocketed the doctor who
save his life; a guest attacked his host; the accused
stole from one who loaned money to pay off a debt;
boxing the finder of ones lost property or who
protected a missing relative.
66
Place
pubic
where
duty is
Par 5. Where
public
authorities are
engaged
in
the discharge
of their duties
Public
authorities in the
performance of
their
official
duties
In their office.
Par
2.
Contempt or
insult to public
authorities
Same
Outside of their
office.
performed
The
offended
party
Public authority
should not be
the
offended
party.
67
their
As
to
action
their
Requires more
than 3 armed
malefactors i.e.
at least four
More than 3
malefactors shall
have
acted
together in the
commission of
the
offense.
Thus,
band
members are all
principals.
Par 8. With
the
Aid
of
Armed men
At least two
This is present
even if one of
the
offenders
merely relied on
their aid, for
actual aid is not
necessary.
Armed men are
mere
accomplices.
REPETITION OF CRIMES
68
NOTES:
a. It is important that: (a) there be two separate
convictions so that it can not be considered in
contemporaneous convictions (b) both be felonies
and are found in the same title i.e. Crimes against
persons, against property, against chastity and (c)
the convictions must follow the chronology of the
commission of the crimes.
b. It does not prescribe no matter how far ago was
the first conviction.
c. The accused need not serve the penalty of his first
conviction as he may have been pardoned or
placed under probation because what matters is
the fact of conviction and not service of sentence.
The first penalty may be a fine.
d. Amnesty extinguishes the penalty and its effects.
HOWEVER, pardon does not obliterate the fact that
the accused was recidivist. Thus, even if the
accused was granted pardon in the first offense
but he commits another felony embraced in the
same title of the RPC, the first conviction is still
counted to make him a recidivist. This is true even
pardon is absolute, because pardon only excuses
the service of the penalty, but not the conviction.
e. The purpose/reason is to prevent specialization of
crimes. The implication is that the offender is
specializing on such kind of crime and the law
wants to prevent any specialization.
f. Being an ordinary aggravating, recidivism affects
only the periods of a penalty, EXCEPT in
prostitution and vagrancy (Art 202) and gambling
(PD 1602) wherein recidivism increases the
penalties by degrees. No other generic aggravating
produces this effect.
g. In recidivism, it is sufficient that the succeeding
offense be committed after the commission of the
preceding offense PROVIDED that at the time of
his trial for the second offense, the accused had
already been convicted of the first offense.
h. If both offenses were committed on the same
date, they shall be considered as only one, hence,
they cannot be separately counted in order to
constitute
recidivism.
Also,
judgments
of
convictions handed down on the same day shall be
considered as only one conviction. This is because
the RPC requires that to be considered separate
convictions, at the time of trial for one crime the
accused shall have been previously convicted by
final judgment of the other.
69
sentence.
Requisites:
1. The accused is on trial for an offense;
2. He previously served sentence for another offense
to which the law attaches an equal or greater
penalty or for 2 or more crimes to which attaches a
lighter penalty than that for the new offense;
3. He is convicted of the new offense.
NOTES:
a. The prior offenses may be violations of special
laws
b. Its appreciation is discretionary with the court
Habitual
delinquen
cy
Found
guilty
a
third time
or oftener.
Serious/les
s
serious
physical
injuries,
Robbery,
theft,
estafa, or
falsification
Extraordina
ry
aggravating
.
Imposition
of
additional
penalty.
10 years
prescriptive
period
70
Recidivism
Reiteracio
n/
Habituality
Offender
served
sentence for
the
1st
offense.
Quasirecidivis
m
One prior
conviction
Any
offense
Generic
aggravating
Not
embraced in
the
same
title.
One
offense
which
the
law attaches
an equal or
greater
penalty or
two offenses
to which the
law attaches
a
lighter
penalty.
Generic
aggravating
Imprescripti
ble
Imprescripti
ble
2nd felony
must be
committed
after
conviction
by
final
judgment
of the 1st
but before
sentence
begins or
while
serving
It is enough
that a final
judgment
has
been
rendered in
the
1st
offense.
An offense
embraced in
the
same
Title of the
RPC.
Requisites:
1. There are at least 2 principals
a. Principal by Inducement (one who offers)
b. Principal by Direct Participation (accepts)
2. The PPR should be previous to and in consideration
of the criminal act.
Whose Liability is Aggravated
1. If alleged as a general circumstance only the
liability of the receiver is affected.
2. If alleged as a qualifying circumstance both the
liability of the giver and receiver are affected.
Special
aggravatin
g.
NOTES:
a. This circumstance affects both principals.
b. This deals with the motive. It involves the giver of
the price, promise or reward known as the
Principal by Inducement and the actor as Principal
by Direct Participation.
c. In consideration means the PPR was the sole
reason for the commission of the crime. Had it not
been for the PPR the accused would not have
committed the crime. The actor should not have
his own reasons for committing the crime. Thus
motive is essential.
d. The PPR may be in any form: money, chattels,
material services. It need not be actually delivered,
it being sufficient that the inducement is accepted.
The recipient may be the actor himself or a person
closely associated with him such as: promise of a
promotion or employment of a family member.
e. If the reward is given after the commission of the
crime without previous promise as an appreciation
for the aid shown by the other accused, it cannot
be considered for the purpose of increasing the
penalty.
Paragraph 12. By Means of Inundation, Fire,
Poison, Explosion etc
That the crime be committed by means of inundation,
fire, poison, explosion, stranding of a vessel or
intentional damage thereto, derailment of a locomotive,
or by the use of any other artifice involving great waste
and ruin.
NOTES:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
be
committed
with
the
evident
71
h.
CRAFT
The Act of the accused
done in order not to
arouse the suspicion of
the victim constitutes
craft.
FRAUD
When there is a direct
inducement by insidious
words or machinations,
fraud is present.
Requisite:
The offender must have actually used craft, fraud, or
disguise to facilitate the commission of the crime.
Illustration:
In Pp vs San Pedro, Jan 22, 1980, where the accused
pretended to hire the driver in order to get his car, it
was held there was craft directed to the theft of the
vehicle, separate from the means subsequently used to
treacherously to kill the defenseless driver.
In Pp. vs Masilang, July 11, 1986, there was also craft
where after hitching a ride, the accused requested the
driver to take them to a place to visit somebody, when
in fact they had already planned to kill the driver.
72
By a Band
The element of band is
appreciated when the
offense is committed by
more than 3 malefactors
regardless
of
the
comparative strength of
the victim/s.
Abuse of Superior
Strength
The gravamen of this
circumstance is the taking
advantage by the culprits
of their collective strength
to overpower their
relatively weaker victim/s.
Hence, what is taken into
account here is not the
number of the aggressors
and the fact that they are
armed, but their relative
physical strength vis-a-vis
the offended party.
Note: Abuse
cuadrilla/band.
of
Superior
Strength
absorbs
NOTES:
a. This is the qualifying circumstance of murder which
is preferred over the others and it usually absorbs
the other circumstances which have relation to the
means or method of attack such as nighttime,
uninhabited place, use of poison or explosion, fire
or evident premeditation. If they are not absorbed
they are appreciated as ordinary aggravating
b. Applicable only to crimes against persons.
c. Means, methods or forms need not insure the
accomplishment of the commission of the crime.
d. Applies even if the crime against persons is
complexed with other crimes, such as direct
assault.
e. Killing a child is always treacherous.
f. Rule as to Frontal Attacks:
GENERALLY: there is no treachery as the victim
cannot be said to be unaware as he is face-to-face
with his attacker.
EXCEPTIONS:
i. if the attack was so sudden, deliberate and
unexpected and consciously adopted or
ii. if the victim was forced into a position where
he is defenseless, as in the Teehankee case
g. In case the attack was preceded by a quarrel:
there is no treachery
h. In case of Attack from Behind: Generally
considered as treacherous if this mode was
consciously adopted.
i. Other situations where victim is said to be
defenseless: a) where he was preoccupied: as
when he was busy studying or eating or watching
an ongoing activity or was answering the call of
nature, or was working; b) victim was asleep or
resting; c) body was found with hands tied.
73
j.
Means,
methods,
or
forms employed
to
make
it
difficult on the
part
of
the
offended party
to
defend
himself.
74
Abuse of
Superior
Strength
No
means
employed.
Offender merely
takes advantage
of his superior
strength.
Means
Employed to
Weaken the
Defense
Means employed
to materially
weaken the
resisting power
of the offended
party.
NOTES:
a. This is appreciated in crimes against persons,
chastity, honor, coercion, unjust vexation.
b. Examples: kissing a girl in public; hanging the
victim in a tree; throwing the body in a urinal or
garbage pit; removing the pants; boxing the priest
who is saying mass; committing rape dog style.
c. This is the only aggravating which may arise after
the commission of the crime; as chopping off the
arms and legs or sex organ of the victim after
killing him.
Ignominy
Cruelty
Shocks moral conscience
Physical
Moral effect of a crime Pertains to the physical
and it pertains to the suffering of the victim so
moral order, whether or the victim has to be alive.
not the victim is dead or
alive
Paragraph 18. Unlawful Entry
That the crime be committed after an unlawful entry.
There is an unlawful entry when an entrance is
effected by a way not intended for the purpose.
UNLAWFUL ENTRY when entrance is effected by a
way not intended for a purpose. The passage is other
than the door.
Reason for the Aggravation
One who acts, not respecting the walls erected by men
to guard their property and provide for their safety,
shows a greater perversity, a greater audacity, hence
the law punishes him with more severity.
NOTES:
a. Unlawful entry must be a means to effect entrance
and not for escape.
b. The entry must be to commit a crime and not just
to violate the dwelling else the unlawful entry
becomes trespass .
c. This is inherent in crimes of trespass to dwelling,
robbery with force upon things.
Paragraph 19. Breaking of a Wall, Roof, Floor,
Window
That as a means to the commission of a crime a wall,
roof, floor, door, or window be broken.
NOTES:
a. These pertains to the wall, roof, floor of a dwelling
and the breaking is for the purpose of gaining
ENTRY in order to commit a crime inside. Else it is
attempted trespass or malicious mischief. If the
wall, etc. is broken in order to get out of the place,
it is not aggravating.
b. It is not necessary that the offender should have
entered the building. Thus, if the offender broke
the window to enable himself to reach a purse
which he took while his body was outside the
building, the crime of theft was attended by this
aggravating.
c. It is inherent in Robbery With Force Upon Things
Par 19
It involves the breaking
(rompimiento)
of
the
enumerated parts of the
house.
Par 18
Presupposes that there is
no breaking.
75
c.
d.
e.
IGNOMINY (PAR.17)
Involves moral suffering
Chapter 5
ALTERNATIVE CIRCUMSTNACES
Article 15. Alternative Circumstances
ALTERNATIVE CIRCUMSTANCES - are those which
must be taken into consideration as aggravating or
mitigating according to the nature and effects of the
crime, and the other conditions attending its
commission.
They are:
1) relationship
2) intoxication
3) degree of instruction and education of the
offender.
RELATIONSHIP - it shall be taken when the offended
party is the:
a) spouse
b) ascendant
c) descendant
d) legitimate, natural or adopted brother or
sister, or
e) relative by affinity in the same degree of the
offender.
76
c.
d.
e.
77
a.
b.
When it is Mitigating
Generally it is mitigating, especially to crimes mala
prohibita, but not to crimes universally condemned as
evil or those which are mala in se or where the natural
law posits the general and obvious rule that said crime
should not be done, like rape, murder, or robbery.
When it is Aggravating
When the accused has a high degree of education
which he used or availed of to commit or facilitate the
commission of the crime. Examples are:
i) A law student who used his knowledge to defraud
another
ii) Physician who kills his patients
iii) A handwriting expert who falsifies using his
knowledge
iv) A Financial Analyst defrauding a business entity
v) Computer expert who hacks
Title 2
PERSONS CRIMINALLY LIABLE FOR FELONIES
WHO ARE CRIMINALLY LIABLE
Article 16. The following are criminally liable for
GRAVE AND LESS GRAVE FELONIES:
1) Principals
2) Accomplices
3) Accessories
The following are criminally liable for LIGHT FELONIES:
1) Principals
2) Accomplices
NOTES:
a. The classification into principals, accomplices and
accessories is based on the Degree of
Participation in the commission of a crime where
at least two persons participated.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
b.
c.
d.
1.
2.
78
REASONS:
(i) The element of mens rea can only be found in
natural persons: malice in intentional felonies
and indifference in culpable felonies are
attributes of natural persons i.e. because of
held
be
entity
3.
2)
PRINCIPAL BY DIRECT PARTICIPATION (PDP) refers to those who actually and directly take part in
the execution of the act. In all crimes there must
always be those who actually perform the act which
brings about the crime. They may be only one person
or more. Whenever there are two or more involved in a
crime, it becomes necessary to find out those who
actually executed the act so that all may be held
equally liable.
Requisites:
1. That they participated in the criminal resolution;
and
2. That they carried out their plan and personally
took part in its execution by acts which directly
tended to the same end.
79
80
4.
Proof of Conspiracy
Best proof of conspiracy: express conspiracy
Direct proof of conspiracy is not necessary. The
existence thereof maybe inferred under the Doctrine of
Implied Conspiracy which directs that if two or more
persons:
(v) Aimed
by
their
acts
towards
the
accomplishment of the same unlawful object.
(vi) Each doing a part so that their acts, though
apparently independent, were in fact
connected and cooperative.
(vii) Indicating a closeness of personal association
and a concurrence of sentiment.
(viii)
A conspiracy maybe inferred though
no actual meeting among them to concert is
proved.
Effect of Conspiracy
There will be a joint or common or collective criminal
liability, otherwise each will be liable only to the extent
of the act done by him.
For what crime will the co-conspirators be
liable?
1. For the crime actually committed if it was the crime
agreed upon.
2. For any other crime even if not agreed upon,
provided it was the direct, natural, logical
consequence of, or related to, or was necessary to
effect, the crime agreed upon (e.g.killing the
guard). Otherwise only the person who committed
the different crime will be held liable (e.g. killing a
stranger)
Requisites:
NOTES:
81
word)
Principal by induction
There is an inducement to
commit a crime
Becomes liable only when
the crime is committed by
PDP.
b.
c.
82
2.
83
Principal By
Indispensable
Cooperation
cooperation of the PIC is
Co-conspirator
Liability is collective, not
individual.
Know of the criminal
intention as he is one of
the authors.
Decide
crime.
to
commit
the
not
the
the
not
c.
d.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
KINDS:
1.
8.
84
9.
e.
2.
3.
b.
85
c.
d.
should
the
Accessories
Does not Take direct part
or cooperates in, or
induces the commission of
the crime
Does not cooperate in the
commission
of
the
offense.
Participation
is
subsequent
to
the
commission of the crime.
86
3.
4.
5.
Social Injury
Produced
by
the
disturbance and alarm
which are the outcome
of the offense.
Is sought to be repaired
through the imposition
of penalties.
Offended party cannot
pardon the offender so
as to relieve him of the
penalty.
87
Personal Injury
Caused to the victim of
the crime who suffered
damage to his person,
property,
honor
or
chastity.
Repaired
through
indemnity.
The offended party may
waive the indemnity
and the State has no
reason to insist in its
payment.
3.
detention was only preventive measure. Quasirecidivism presupposes the commission of a crime
during the service of the penalty for a previous
crime.
1.
2.
Seduction, Abduction,
(A344, RPC)
Acts
of
Lasciviousness
88
Arresto mayor,
Suspension,
Destierro.
Civil
interdiction
during 30
years,
if
not
expressly
remitted in
the pardon
Light penalties:
Arresto menor,
Public censure.
Penalties common to the three preceding
classes:
Fine, and
Bond to keep the peace.
Perpetual
absolute
disqualificat
ion, unless
expressly
remitted in
the pardon
of
the
principal
penalty
That
of
perpetual
special
disqualifica
tion from
suffrage,
unless
expressly
remitted in
the pardon
of
the
principal
penalty
ACCESSORY PENALTIES
Perpetual or temporary absolute disqualification,
Perpetual or temporary special disqualification,
Suspension from public office, the right to vote and
be voted for, the profession or calling.
Civil interdiction,
Indemnification,
Forfeiture or confiscation of instruments and
proceeds of the offense,
Payment of costs.
AS TO SUBJECT MATTER
Corporal (death)
Deprivation of freedom
(reclusion, prision, arresto)
Restriction of freedom
(destierro)
Deprivation of rights
(disqualification and
suspension)
Pecuniary fine
AS TO GRAVITY
Capital
Afflictive
Correctional
Light
Perpetual
absolute
disqualifica
tion
RECLUSIO
N
PERPETU
A/
TEMPORA
L
Civil
interdiction
for life or
during the
sentence
PRISION
MAYOR
Temporary
absolute
disqualifica
tion
PRISION
CORRECTIO
NAL
Suspension
from
public
office,
profession or
calling
NOTES:
a. The classification applies if the fine is imposed as a
single (e.g. 200 to 6000) or alternative penalty
(e.g. arresto mayor or fine from 200 to 1000).
Hence, it does not apply if the fine is imposed
together with another penalty.
b. HOWEVER, penalty cannot be imposed in the
alternative since it is the duty of the court to
indicate the penalty imposed definitely and
positively. Thus, the court cannot sentence the
guilty person in a manner such as to pay fine of
P1000, or to suffer an imprisonment of 2 years,
and to pay the cost.
c. If the fine imposed by the law for the felony is
exactly P200, it is a light felony.
Pp vs Yu Hai, 99 P 725
Under A9, RPC, where the fine in question is
exactly P200, it is a light penalty, thus the offense
is a light felony. Whereas, under A26, RPC, it is a
correctional penalty, hence the offense involved is
a less grave felony. This discrepancy shall be
resolved liberally in favor of the accused, hence A9
prevails over A26.
Article 9
Applicable
in
determining
the
prescriptive period of
felonies.
89
Perpetual
special
disqualificatio
n
from
suffrage,
if
the duration
of
imprisonment
exceeds/
8
months,
unless
expressly
remitted
in
the pardon of
the principal
penalty
Article 26
Applicable
in
determining
the
prescriptive period of
penalties.
Chapter 3
Duration and Effect of Penalties
2.
SECTION 1
Duration of penalties
DURATION OF EACH DIFFERENT PENALTIES
(A27, RPC):
3.
1.
4.
2.
3.
PRISION
MAYOR
AND
TEMPORARY
DISQUALIFICATION 6 years and 1 day to 12
years, except when disqualification is accessory
penalty, in which case its duration is that of the
principal penalty.
4.
5.
6.
7.
90
e.
f.
g.
h.
c.
d.
SECTION 2
Effects of the penalties according to their
respective nature
EFFECTS OF THE PENALTIES OF PERPETUAL OR
TEMPORARY ABSOLUTE DISQUALIFICATION
(Article 30, RPC)
1.
3.
91
2.
4.
NOTES:
In case of temporary disqualification, the
disqualification in 2 and 3 (not in 1 and 4)
shall last during the term of the sentence and
is removed after the service of the same.
In absolute disqualification, all these
effects last during the lifetime of the convict
and even after the service of the sentence.
A plebiscite is not mentioned or contemplated
in number 2, hence, the offender may vote in
that exercise, subject to the provisions of
pertinent election laws at the time.
EFFECTS OF THE PENALTIES OF PERPETUAL OR
TEMPORARY SPECIAL DISQUALIFICATION (Arts
31 and 32):
1. For public office, profession or calling
a. the deprivation of the office, employment,
profession, or calling affected;
b. the disqualification for holding similar offices
or employments either perpetually or during
the term of the sentence according to the
extent of such disqualification.
2.
a.
b.
92
3. marital authority
4. right to manage property and to dispose of the
same by acts inter vivos.
Note: He can dispose of such property by will or
donation mortis causa.
Civil Interdiction is Accessory to the Following
Principal Penalties
1. If death penalty is commuted to life
imprisonment;
2. Reclusion perpetua;
3. Reclusion temporal.
EFFECTS OF BOND TO KEEP THE PEACE (Article
35, RPC). - It shall be the duty of any person
sentenced to give bond to keep the peace, to present
two sufficient sureties who shall undertake that such
person will not commit the offense sought to be
prevented, and that in case such offense be committed
they will pay the amount determined by the court in its
judgment, or otherwise to deposit such amount in the
office of the clerk of the court to guarantee said
undertaking.
The court shall determine, according to its discretion,
the period of duration of the bond. (Read also Art. 284)
Should the person sentenced fail to give the bond as
required he shall be detained for a period which shall in
no case exceed 6 months, if he shall have prosecuted
for a grave or less grave felony, and shall not exceed
30 days, if for a light felony.
Bond to keep peace
A principal penalty, not an
accessory penalty.
No particular felony where
this is prescribed.
The
consequence
of
failure to put up this bond
is imprisonment for 6
months or 30 days
depending on whether the
felony committed is grave
or less grave felony or
light.
2.
Crime covered
Extinguishment
of
Criminal
Liability
Effect on
liability
93
civil
Pardon by the
Chief
Executive
(Art 36)
Any
crime,
unless otherwise
provided by or
subject
to
conditions in the
Constitution or
the laws.
Extinguishes
criminal liability
Cannot
affect
the civil liability
ex delicto of the
Pardon by the
Offended
Party (Art 23)
Crimes against
chastity under
RPC only (also
in rape)
When granted
To
granted
whom
Whether it can
be conditional
offender
Only
after
conviction
by
final judgment
Any or all of the
accused
May be absolute
or conditional
the
course
of
the
judicial
Does
not
extinguish
criminal liability
although it may
constitute a bar
to
the
prosecution of
the offender
Offended party
can waive the
civil liability
NOTES:
94
Duration of stay
Remain under
confinement until his fine
is satisfied; but it shall not
exceed 1/3 of the term of
sentence, and not more
than 1 year.
Fine
NOTES:
TOTALITY OF PENALTY UNDER THE 3FOLD RULE: Do not consider the totality of the
imprisonment that the convict is sentenced to but
consider the totality or the duration of the
imprisonment that the convict will be required to
serve under the 3-fold rule. If the totality of the
imprisonment under this rule does not exceed 6
years, then even if the totality of the sentences
without applying the 3-fold rule will go beyond 6
years, the convict shall be required to undergo
subsidiary penalty if he could not pay the fine.
Where No Subsidiary Imprisonment is Imposed
1. Penalty imposed is higher than prision
correccional.
2. Non-payment of reparation, indemnification,
and costs. It is only for fines.
3. Non-payment of costs.
4. Penalty imposed is a fine and another penalty
without fixed duration like censure.
SECTION 3
Penalties in which other accessory penalties are
inherent
ARTICLE 40. DEATH, ITS ACCESSORY PENALTIES
The death penalty, when it is not executed by reason
of commutation or pardon shall carry with it that of:
a. perpetual absolute disqualification; and
b.
ARTICLE 44.
PENALTIES
a.
ARRESTO,
ITS
ACCESSORY
NOTES:
95
Reclusion Perpetua
Specific duration of 20
years and 1 day to 40
years
and
accessory
penalties
Imposable on felonies
punished by RPC
Life Imprisonment
No definite term or
accessory penalties
Imposable
on
crimes
punished by special laws
2.
NOTES:
The
government
cannot
appeal
the
modification of the sentence if the defendant did
not appeal. But if the defendant appeals, it
removes all bars to the review and correction of
the penalty even is an increase thereof be the
result.
REASON: Minority
circumstance.
is
always
mitigating
b.
c.
By Period
1. Minimum, medium, maximum refers to the
proper period of the penalty which should be
imposed when aggravating or mitigating
circumstances attend to the commission of the
crime.
96
b.
c.
d.
NOTES:
Rape with homicide is a special complex crime
not covered by Art 48.
When in obedience to an order several
accused simultaneously shot many persons,
without evidence how many each killed, there
is only a single offense, there being a single
criminal impulse. This is a ruling in Pp vs
Lawas, June 30, 1955. This is applicable only if
there is no evidence at all to show the number
of persons killed by each several defendants.
The single criminal impulse, same motive
or the single purpose theory has no legal
basis, for Art 48 speaks of a single act.
However, the theory is acceptable when it is
not certain who among the accused killed or
injured each of the several victims.
When a complex crime is charged and one
offense is not proven, the accused can be
convicted of the other.
There is no complex crime of arson with
homicide under Art 48, Art 320 of the RPC, as
amended by RA 7659, having provided one
penalty therefor.
Art 48 is applicable to crimes through
negligence.
When 2 crimes produced by a single act are
respectively within the exclusive jurisdiction of
2 courts of different jurisdiction, the court of
higher jurisdiction shall try the complex crime.
Since both crimes were the result of a single
act, the information cannot be split into 2.
97
2.
NOTES:
Kidnapping the victim to murder him in a
secluded place ransom was not paid so
victim was killed. Kidnapping was a necessary
means to commit murder. Where the person
kidnapped is killed in the course of the
detention, regardless of whether the killing
was purposely sought or was merely an
afterthought, the kidnapping and murder or
homicide can no longer be complexed under
Art 48, nor be treated as separate crimes but
shall be punished as a special complex crime
under the last paragraph of Art 267, as
amended by RA 7659. But where the victim
was taken from his home but it was solely for
the purpose of killing him and not for detaining
him illegally or for the purpose of ransom, the
crime is simple murder.
Necessary means does not mean indispensable
means. Indispensable would mean it is an
element of the crime. The crime can be
committed by another means. The means
actually employed (another crime) was merely
to facilitate and insure the consummation of
the crime.
When the definition of a felony one offense is
a means to commit the other, there is no
complex crime.
Subsequent acts of intercourse, after forcible
abduction with rape, are separate acts of rape.
Not complex crime when trespass to dwelling
is a direct means to commit a grave offense.
Trespass will be considered as aggravating (
unlawful entry or breaking part of the
dwelling)
No complex crime, when one offense is
committed to conceal the other.
Where the offender had in his possession the
funds which he misappropriated, falsification
of a public or official document involving said
funds is a separate offense. The falsification
was made to conceal the malversation. But
when the offender had to falsify a public
document to obtain possession of the funds
which he misappropriated, the falsification is a
necessary means to commit the malversation.
There is no complex crime of rebellion with
murder, arson, robbery, or other common
crimes. They are mere ingredients of the crime
of rebellion absorbed already. But one who,
for some independent or personal motives,
commits murder or other common offenses in
addition to rebellion, may be prosecuted for
and convicted of such common offenses.
Art 48 is intended to favor the accused.
Complex crime proper may be committed by
two persons, as in seduction through
usurpation of official functions.
But when 1 of the offenses, as a means to
commit the other, was committed by one of
98
1.
99
Continued Crime
Same
Plurality of Crime
No conviction of any of
the crimes committed.
Recidivism
There must be conviction
by final judgment of the
first or prior offense.
Art 48
Penalty for the more or
most serious crime shall
be imposed, the same to
be applied in its maximum
period.
100
Principals
Accomplic
es
Accessorie
s
Consummat
ed
Penalty
Imposed by
law
1 degree
lower
2 degrees
lower
Frustrate
d
1 degree
lower
Attempte
d
2 degrees
lower
2 degrees
lower
3 degrees
lower
3 degrees
lower
4 degrees
lower
Cases
Where
Penalty
Imposed
on
Accessories are One Degree Lower Instead
of Two Degrees Lower
a. Knowingly using counterfeited seal or forged
signature or stamp of the President. (Art 162)
b. Illegal Possession and use of a false treasury
or bank note. (Art 168)
c. Using a falsified document. (Art 173, Par 3)
d. Using a falsified dispatch. (Art 173, par 2)
NOTES:
1.
a.
b.
c.
2.
3.
4.
Degree
Refers to the penalty
imposable for a felony
committed considering the
stages of execution and
the degree of participation
of the offender.
May refer to both divisible
and indivisible penalties.
Period
Refers to the duration of
the penalty consisting of
the maximum, medium
and
minimum,
after
considering the presence
or absence of aggravating
circumstances
Refers only to divisible
penalties.
101
a.
b.
RULES
FOR
GRADUATING
Rule 4.
When the penalty is composed of several periods
(at least 3), corresponding to different divisible
penalties - the penalty next lower in degree shall be
composed of the period immediately following the
minimum prescribed and of the two next following,
which shall be taken from the penalty prescribed, if
possible; otherwise from the penalty immediately
following in the above mentioned respective graduated
scale. In other words, the penalty next lower in degree
is the penalty consisting in the 3 periods down in the
scale.
e.g. The penalty which is composed of several periods
corresponding to different divisible penalties is PM in its
medium period to RT in its minimum. The period
immediately following the minimum, which is PM in its
medium period, is prision mayor in its minimum. The 2
periods next following are the maximum and medium
periods of PC, the penalty next following in the scale
102
103
Recidivism
Same title
No time fixed by law
2nd conviction
If not offset by MC,
increases
penalty
to
maximum.
104
2.
a. When
b.
c.
applied.
applied.
shall be applied.
d. When
NOTES:
Art 63 is applicable only when the penalty is either
one indivisible penalty or two indivisible penalties.
Thus, it is NOT applicable if the penalty is reclusion
temporal in its maximum to death, because
although this penalty includes 2 indivisible
penalties, it has 3 periods.
ARTICLE 64. RULES FOR THE APPLICATION OF
PENALTIES WHICH CONTAIN THREE PERIODS
In cases in which the penalties prescribed by law
contain three periods, whether it be a single divisible
penalty or composed of three different penalties, each
one of which forms a period in accordance with the
provisions of articles 76 and 77, the courts shall
observe for the application of the penalty the following
rules, according to whether there are or are no
mitigating or aggravating circumstances:
1.
2.
3.
Two or more mitigating and no aggravating penalty next lower, in the period applicable,
according to the number and nature of such
circumstances.
5.
7.
NOTES:
105
3.
106
SERVICE
OF
NOTES:
1. Art 68 is not immediately applicable to a minor
under 18 years of age.
2. Art 68 applies to such minor if his application for
suspension of sentence is disapproved or while in
the reformatory institution he becomes incorrigible,
in which case he shall be returned to court for the
imposition of the proper penalty. The penalties to
be imposed are:
a. Under 15 but over 9 years of age when acted
with discernment - at least 2 degrees lower
than that prescribed by law for the crime
committed.
b. Over 15 (should be 15 or over) and under 18
years of age - the penalty next lower than that
prescribed by law shall be imposed, but always
in the proper period. (1 degree lower)
SUCCESSIVE
107
ARTICLE
74.
PENALTY
HIGHER
THAN
RECLUSION PERPETUA IN CERTAIN CASES
In cases in which the law prescribes a penalty higher
than another given penalty, without specifically
designating the name of the former, if such higher
penalty should be that of death, the same penalty and
the accessory penalties of article 40, shall be
considered as the next higher penalty.
NOTE: If the law or decision says higher than RP or 2
degrees higher than RT, then the penalty imposed is
RP or RT as the case may be and not death. Death
must be designated by name. However, the accessory
penalties of death when not executed by reason of
commutation or pardon shall be imposed..
ARTICLE 75. INCREASING OR REDUCING THE
PENALTY OF FINE BY ONE OR MORE DEGREES
Whenever it may be necessary to increase or reduce
the penalty of fine by one or more degrees, it shall be
increased or reduced, respectively, for each degree, by
one-fourth of the maximum amount prescribed by law,
without, however, changing the minimum.
108
Penalti
es
Reclusi
on
Tempo
ral
Prision
Mayor,
absolu
te
disqual
ificatio
n and
special
tempor
ary
disqual
ificatio
n
Prision
Correc
cional,
suspen
sion
and
destier
ro
Arresto
Mayor
(does
not
follow
the
rule)
Arresto
Menor
Time
included
in
the
penalty
in
its
entirety
From 12
years and
1 day to
20 years
From
6
years and
1 day to
12 years
Time
included
in
its
minimu
m period
Time
include
d in its
medium
period
Time
included
in
its
maximu
m period
From 12
years and
1 day to
14 years
and
8
months
From
6
years and
1 day to 8
years
From 14
years, 8
months
and
1
day
to
17 years
From 8
years
and
1
day
to
10 years
From 17
years, 4
months
and 1 day
to
20
years
From 10
years and
1 day to
12 years
2.
3.
4.
From
6
months
and 1 day
to 6 years
From
1
month
and 1 day
to
6
months
From 1 to
30 days
From
6
months
and 1 day
to 2 years
and
4
months
From
1
month
and 1 day
to
2
months
From 1 to
10 days
From 2
years, 4
months
and
1
day to 4
years
and
2
months
From 2
months
and
1
day to 4
months
From 11
to 20
days
From
4
years
2
months
and 1 day
to 6 years
Title 4
EXTINCTION OF CRIMINAL LIABILITY
From
4
months 1
day to 6
months
CRIMINAL
LIABILITY
EXTINGUISHED AS FOLLOWS:
From 21
to 30
days
109
IS
TOTALLY
2. By service of sentence
judicial notice
* BOTH DO NOT EXTINGUISH THE CIVIL LIABILITY OF
THE OFFENDER
5. By prescription of the crime.
AMNESTY, Defined.
It is an act of the sovereign power granting oblivion
or a general pardon for a past offense and is rarely, if
ever, exercised in the favor of a single individual, and is
usually exerted in behalf of certain classes of persons,
who are subject to trial but have not yet been
convicted.
4. By absolute pardon.
PARDON. Defined.
It is an act of grace proceeding from the power
entrusted with the execution of the laws which
exempts the individual on whom it is bestowed from
the punishment of the law inflicts for the crime he has
committed.
110
- amnesty being by
proclamation of the chief
executive with the
concurrence of Congress,
is a public act of which
the courts should take
Prescription of Crimes
Reclusion perpetua or temporal
Punishable by afflictive penalties
Punishable by correctional penalties
Punishable by Arresto Mayor
Crime of libel/similar offenses
Oral defamation/slander by deed
Light Offenses
20 years
15 years
10 years
5 years
1 year
6 months
2 months
PRESCRIPTION OF PENALTIES
Death and Reclusion Perpetua
20 years
Afflictive Penalties
15 years
Correccional Penalties
10 years
Arresto Mayor
5 years
Light Penalties
1 year
2. By commutation of the sentence.
111
4. By parole.
PAROLE, defined.
Parole consists in the suspension of the sentence of
a convict after serving the minimum term of the
indeterminate penalty, without granting a pardon,
prescribing the terms upon which the sentence shall be
suspended.
PERSON
GRANTED
2.
3.
4.
5.
112
2. REPARATION
3. INDEMNIFICATION FOR
DAMAGES
CONSEQUENTIAL
SUBSIDIARY LIABILITY
Requisites:
1. The employer must be engaged in business or
in trade or industry while the accused was his
employee.
2. At the time the crime was committed the
employer-employee relationship must be
existing between the two;
3. The employee must have been found guilty of
the crime charged and accordingly held civilly
liable; and
4. the writ of execution for the satisfaction of the
civil liability was returned unsatisfied because
the accused-employee does not have enough
property to pay the civil liability.
all the requisites must concur
there is no need to file a civil action against
the employer in order to enforce the subsidiary
civil liability for the crime committed by his
destierro
to
6
years
and 4
months
Arresto
Mayor
From
1
month
and 1
day to
6
month
s
From
1 to
30
days
From 1
month
and 1
day to
2
months
2.
3.
4.
5.
Penalties
Reclusion
Temporal
Prision
Mayor,
absolute
disqualific
ation and
special
temporary
disqualific
ation
Prision
Correccion
al,
suspensio
n and
113
Time
inclu
ded
in the
penal
ty in
its
entir
ety
From
12
years
and 1
day to
20
years
From
6
years
and 1
day to
12
years
From
6
month
s and
1 day
Time
includ
ed in
its
minim
um
period
Time
inclu
ded
in its
medi
um
perio
d
Time
includ
ed in
its
maxim
um
period
From
12
years
and 1
day to
14
years
and 8
months
From 6
years
and 1
day to
8 years
From
14
years,
8
month
s and
1 day
to 17
years
From
8
years
and 1
day to
10
years
From
17
years,
4
months
and 1
day to
20
years
From
10
years
and 1
day to
12
years
From 6
months
and 1
day to
2 years
From
2
years,
4
month
From 4
years 2
months
and 1
day to
Arresto
Menor
From 1
to 10
days
s and
1 day
to
4
years
and 2
month
s
From
2
month
s and
1 day
to
4
month
s
From
11 to
20
days
6 years
From 4
months
1 day
to
6
months
From
21 to
30 days
BOOK II
TITLE I
CRIMES AGAINST NATIONAL SECURITY AND
THE LAWS OF NATIONS
Crimes against national security
1.
Treason (Art. 114);
2.
Conspiracy and proposal to commit treason
(Art. 115);
3.
Misprision of treason (Art. 116); and
4.
Espionage (Art. 117).
Crimes against the law of nations
1.
Inciting to war or giving motives for reprisals
(Art. 118);
2.
Violation of neutrality (Art. 119);
3.
Corresponding with hostile country (Art. 120);
4.
Flight to enemy's country (Art. 121); and
5.
Piracy in general and mutiny on the high seas
(Art. 122).
Ways to Prove
114
1. Treason
a. testimony of at least 2 witnesses to the same
overt act
1.
2.
3.
DEFENSES
duress or uncontrollable fear
obedience to de facto government
NOT DEFENSES
suspended allegiance
joining the enemy army
becoming a citizen of the enemy
Elements
3.
115
thus
1.
2.
2.
4.
5.
6.
7.
3.
Persons Liable
1. first mode:
a. Filipino (being a public officer is aggravating)
b. alien residing
2. second mode:
a. offender is a public officer
116
ESPIONAGE
citizenship of offender
war and peace time
Committed
ways
in
many
Elements
1.
2.
3.
Elements
1.
2.
3.
Qualifying Circumstances
1. Notice or information might be useful to the enemy
2. Offender intended to aid the enemy (crime amounts
to treason)
Article 121.
1. Filipino citizen
2. Alien residing in the Philippines
Elements of piracy
Elements
Elements of mutiny
1.
2.
3.
4.
Persons liable
117
118
MUTINY
unlawful resistance to
a superior, or the
raising of commotions
and disturbances on
board a ship against
the authority of its
commander
Intent to gain is not
an element
Attack from inside.
Offender is a member
strangers
vessel
to
the
of the complement or
a passenger of the
vessel
PIRACY
ROBBERY ON HGH
SEAS
offender
is
an offender is a member
outsider
of the complement or
a passenger of the
vessel
In both, there is intent to gain and the manner
of committing the crime is the same
WITHIN PHIL. WATERS
Art 122, RPC
PD 532, Anti-Piracy
offender
is
an offender crew or a
outsider
passenger
of
the
vessel
PD 532 (ANTI-PIRACY AND ANTI-HIGHWAY
ROBBERY LAW OF 1974)
Vessel any vessel or watercraft used for (a)
transport of passengers and cargo or (b) for fishing
Punishes the act of AIDING OR ABETTING
PIRACY
Requisites
1. knowingly aids or protects pirates;
2. acquires or receives property taken by such pirates,
or in any manner derives any benefit;
3. directly or indirectly abets the commission of piracy
Note: Under PD 532, piracy may be committed even by
passenger or member of the complement of the vessel.
Article 123. Qualified Piracy
Qualifying Circumstances of Piracy:
a. whenever they have seized a vessel by boarding or
firing upon the same;
b. whenever the pirates have abandoned their victims
without means of saving themselves; or
c. whenever the crime is accompanied by murder,
homicide, physical injuries or rape. (cannot be
Mutiny
is
qualified
under
the
following
circumstances:
(1) When the offenders abandoned the victims without
means of saving themselves; or
(2) When the mutiny is accompanied by rape, murder,
homicide, or physical injuries.
Note that the first circumstance which qualifies piracy
does not apply to mutiny because the mutineers being
119
120
121
C.
122
123
Crimes under this title are those which violate the Bill
of Rights accorded to the citizens under the
Constitution. Under this title, the offenders are public
officers, except as to the last crime offending the
religious feelings under Article 133, which refers to any
person; conspires with a public officer; becomes an
accessory or accomplice. The public officers who may
be held liable are only those acting under supposed
exercise of official functions, albeit illegally.
In its counterpart in Title IX (Crimes Against Personal
Liberty and Security), the offenders are private
persons.
Arbitrary Detention
The term Detention Includes:
a.
b.
c.
2.
Personal
Knowledge
of
facts
and
circumstances based on interviews of
witnesses or complainant or based on facts
gathered after conducting on-the-spot crime scene
investigation.
Persons Liable
Those vested with jurisdiction to order the detention of
another who is accused of committing a crime.
Otherwise the crime is Illegal Detention. They Include:
a. Local Executive Officials
b. Punong Barangay
c. Judges
d. Prosecutors
e. Law Enforcement Agents
f. Commissioner on Immigration
g. Private Person in conspiracy with the public
officials or who participated as accomplices or
accessories
3.
124
1.
B, a
driver, did not want to contribute to the tong. One
day, B was apprehended by A, telling him that he was
driving carelessly. Reckless driving carries with it a
penalty of immediate detention and arrest. B was
brought to the Traffic Bureau and was detained there
until the evening. When A returned, he opened the cell
and told B to go home. Was there a crime of arbitrary
detention or unlawful arrest?
1.
2.
3.
(1) As to offender
In arbitrary detention, the offender is a public
officer possessed with authority to make arrests.
In unlawful arrest, the offender may be any
person.
(2) As to criminal intent
In arbitrary detention, the main reason for
detaining the offended party is to deny him of his
liberty.
In unlawful arrest, the purpose is to accuse the
offended party of a crime he did not commit, to
deliver the person to the proper authority, and to
125
126
DELAY IN DELIVERY
OF DETAINED (125)
Detention is legal in the
beginning, but illegality
starts
from
the
expiration
of
the
Acts punished
1.
2.
Elements
Article 126. Delaying Release
Acts punished
1.
2.
3.
Elements
1.
2.
3.
A: Yes. Expulsion.
Q: If a Filipino citizen is sent out of the country, what
crime is committed?
127
3.
128
If committed at nighttime; or
2.
2.
1.
2.
3.
1.
2.
3.
4.
129
Elements
c.
Acts punished
1. Prohibiting or interrupting, without legal grounds,
the holding of a peaceful meeting, or by dissolving
the same.
Grounds for prohibiting,
dissolving a meeting:
interrupting or
commit a crime.
2.
130
boulevard,
or other
an/or any
where the
131
132
Who Violates
Public official or employee, or of a private
individual or entity.
Coverage
a.
b.
c.
Interim Reliefs
(a) Temporary Protection Order.
133
c.
Concept
The crime committed by any public officer or employee
who shall prevent or disturb the manifestations or
ceremonies of any religion.
2.
Elements
1.
2.
3.
Qualifying Circumstances
1. violence
2. threats
Notes
Manifestation or ceremonies refer to the rituals
or rites or practices such as the holding of a mass
or religious service, baptisms and other sacraments
or prayer meetings.
o They may be unorthodox such as crying,
dancing, gyrating or with the use of props
o They extend to all kinds of worships so long as
these are not indecent or violative of laws or
public morals
The term any religion is broad enough to include
not only the institutional religions, whether
Christian or not
Reading of Bible and then attacking certain
churches in a public plaza is not a ceremony or
manifestation of religion, but only a meeting of a
religious sect. But if done In private home, its a
religious service.
Religious Worship includes people in the act of
performing religious rites for a religious ceremony
or a manifestation of religion. Examples: mass,
baptism, marriage
X, a private person, boxed a priest while the priest
was giving homily and maligning a relative of X. is
X liable? X may be liable under Art. 133 (Offending
religious feelings) because X is a private person.
If the prohibition or disturbance is committed only
in a meeting or rally of a sect, it would be
punishable under Art 131.
Article 133. Offending the Religious Feelings
Concept or essence
134
NATURE
OF
CRIME
Crime
against
the
fundame
ntal law
of the
state
WHO
ARE
LIABLE
Public
officers,
Crime
against
the
fundame
ntal law
of the
state
Public
officers,
outsider
s
outsider
s
IF
ELEMENT
MISSING
If not by
public
officer
=tumults
If by
insider
=unjust
vexation
if not
religious
=tumult
or alarms
Offending
the
Religious
Feeling
(133)
Crime
against
public
order
Public
officers,
Private
persons
outsider
s
if not
notoriously
offensive
=unjust
vexation
if not
tumults
=alarms
and
scandal
If meeting
illegal at
onset
=inciting
to
sedition
or
rebellion
22.
23.
24.
TITLE III
CRIMES AGAINST PUBLIC ORDER
Crimes against public order
1.
Rebellion or insurrection (Art. 134);
2.
Conspiracy and proposal to commit rebellion
(Art. 136);
3.
Disloyalty to public officers or employees (Art.
137);
4.
Inciting to rebellion (Art. 138);
5.
Sedition (Art. 139);
6.
Conspiracy to commit sedition (Art. 141);
7.
Inciting to sedition (Art. 142);
8.
Acts tending to prevent the meeting of
Congress and similar bodies (Art. 143);
9.
Disturbance of proceedings of Congress or
similar bodies (Art. 144);
10.
Violation of parliamentary immunity (Art. 145);
11.
Illegal assemblies (Art. 146);
12.
Illegal associations (Art. 147);
13.
Direct assaults (Art. 148);
14.
Indirect assaults (Art. 149);
15.
Disobedience to summons issued by Congress,
its committees, etc., by the constitutional
commissions, its committees, etc. (Art. 150);
16.
Resistance and disobedience to a person in
authority or the agents of such person (Art.
151);
17.
Tumults and other disturbances of public order
(Art. 153);
18.
Unlawful use of means of publication and
unlawful utterances (Art. 154);
19.
Alarms and scandals (Art. 155);
20.
Delivering prisoners from jails (Art. 156);
21.
Evasion of service of sentence (Art. 157);
135
Principles Include
Political crimes are transitory and continuing
That of absorption of common crimes with political
coloration, except in the case of sedition. The
offenses absorbed include offenses with higher
penalties and offenses penalized under special laws
They maybe committed in times of war and in
times of peace
Article 134. Rebellion/Insurrection
Article 134. Rebellion or Insurrection
Elements
1.
2.
Historical Concept
Rebellion is considered as the last remedy of an
oppressed people against an oppressive or tyrannical
ruler, as a heroic and noble fight to bring about a
change in the social, political and social order for the
better. Thus several rebellions or revolutions are
glorified and considered as historical events such as:
How Committed:
By Rising Publicly and Taking Up Arms Against
the Government
136
is
malversation
Notes
Mere giving of aid or comfort is not criminal in the
case of rebellion. There must be actual
participation.
One maybe convicted of rebellion even if he did
not engage in actual fighting as when he was in
conspiracy with the rebels and he acted as a
courier, supplier of food and ammunitions and
weapons
Public officer must take active part, because mere
silence or omission is not punishable as
rebellion. No crime of misprision of rebellion.
in rebellion, it is not a defense that the accused
never took the oath of allegiance, or that they
never recognized the government
137
support or participation.
Elements
1.
2.
3.
4.
1.
2.
3.
4.
Coup detat
1. Leaders reclusion perpetua
a. any person who
i. leads;
ii. in any manner directs; or
iii. commands others to undertake coup detat
2. Participants (govt) reclusion temporal
a. any person in the govt service who
i. participates; or
ii. executes directions or commands of others
in undertaking coup detat
3. Participants (not govt) prision mayor
a. any person not in the gov.t service who
i. participates;
ii. supports;
iii. finances;
iv. abets; or
v. aids in undertaking a coup detat
138
Acts punished
1.
2.
3.
139
The
person
who
proposes
the
execution
of
the
crime uses secret
means
Elements
1. Offenders rise
a. publicly; and
b. tumultuously;
2. Offenders employ force, intimidation, or other
means outside of legal methods;
3. Purpose is to attain any of the following objects:
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
Sedition vs Treason
Sedition, in its more general sense, is the raising of
commotions or disturbances in the State. While
treason, in its more general sense, is the violation by a
subject of his allegiance to his sovereign.
Article 140. Penalty for Sedition
Persons liable
1.
2.
140
Examples:
1. Staging a violent demonstration in front of the
SM building to protest the failure to protect
small and medium scale businessmen.
2. Destroying the trucks of illegal loggers.
3. Vendors stoning the car of the chief of police for
preventing them form selling in side walks
2.
3.
2.
3.
2.
Unprotected Speeches
1. libelous
2. lewd and obscene speeches
3. fighting words
2.
3.
4.
141
Article 143.
Acts Tending to Prevent the
Meeting of the Congress of the Philippines and
Similar Bodies
Elements
1.
2.
Elements
1.
2.
2.
1.
2.
3.
4.
Elements
There is a meeting of Congress or any of its
committees or subcommittees, constitutional
commissions or committees or divisions thereof, or
of any provincial board or city or municipal council
or board;
2.
142
1.
2.
Elements
There is a meeting, a gathering or group of
Illegal Assembly
(146)
There must be an
actual
meeting
of
armed
persons
to
commit any of the
crimes
punishable
under the RPC, or of
individuals
who,
although not armed,
are incited to the
commission of treason,
rebellion, sedition or
assault upon a person
in authority or
his
agent
Constitutes
crime
under RPC
Illegal Association
(147)
No need for such
1.
2.
Includes a violation of a
special law or those
against public morals.
Persons liable
Act of forming or
organizing
and
membership in the
association is punished
Persons liable: leaders Persons
liable:
and those present
founders,
directors,
president and members
persons, whether in a fixed place or moving;
143
2.
2.
1.
Concept
Those associations organized for the purpose of
committing any felony or for some purpose contrary to
public morals. These include the criminal gangs as the
Kidnap for Ransom Gangs, Bahala Na Gang; Siguesigue
Commandos.
Illegal associations
1.
2.
Persons liable
Elements
1.
2.
3.
1.
B. Distinctions between:
3.
2.
4.
5.
144
PIA
APIA
Force
employed
need not be
serious
Serious
Intimidation/
Resistance
serious
serious
145
a.
b.
c.
d.
2.
Direct assault
rebellion
cannot
be
committed
during
146
1.
2.
3.
Examples:
1. A policeman is having a hard time pushing a
suspect inside a police car because the suspect is
pulling back. A third person who came to help put
the suspect inside the car was kicked by the
suspect. The kicking of the third person constitutes
Physical Injuries merely. The police is not under
Direct Assault.
2. The Mayor is pushed and shoved while on his way
home by an irate person whose house was
demolished. A vendor who pulls the Mayor away is
himself slapped. The crime on the Mayor is direct
assault and the crime on the third person is also
direct assault.
But if the third person directs the vendor to stop
but the vendor tells him not to interfere, the crime
against the third person would be resistance under
Article 151.
3. X came to help The Chief of Police who was being
pushed and shoved by vendors who were not
allowed to sell on the sidewalk. X was also kicked
and boxed and thrown to the ground. Y came to
help X but was himself kicked and boxed. What is
the crime against Y?
ARTICLE 150. DISOBEDIENCE TO SUMMONS ISSUED BY
CONGRESS, ITS COMMITTEES OR SUBCOMMITTEES, BY THE
CONSTITUTIONAL COMMISSIONS, ITS COMMITTEES,
SUBCOMMITTEES OR DIVISIONS
Acts punished
1.
147
3.
4.
5.
Concept
The crime committed by any person who shall resist or
seriously disobey any PIA or APIA while engaged in the
performance of official duties.
The essence is the failure to comply with, or refusal to
obey, orders directly issued by the authorities. Such
orders are peremptory and not merely a declaration of
facts or rights. They are directed to the accused for
compliance or implementation without allowing any
exercise of discretion by him.
1.
2.
3.
Examples:
1. Refusal to submit to the authority of the police and
proceed to the police station by pushing and
shoving the police
2. Refusal to hand over ones drivers license when
required to do so
3. Refusal to vacate premises despite writ issued by
court to place a party in possession, or disobeying
a writ of injunction
4.. Refusal to give up article subjects of lawful seizure
5. But merely questioning the manner of arrest is not
resistance
Examples:
Challenging people to a fight inside city hall or
at the market;
unruly behavior at the
corridors of Justice Hall
Firing a gun within the premises of a public
building, and if somebody was hurt there is a
separate crime of reckless imprudence
resulting to physical injuries
2. Interrupting or disturbing performances, functions or
gatherings or peaceful meetings, if the act is not
included in Articles 131 and 132
Resistance &
Disobedience to PIA
or APIA
(151)
PIA or APIA must be in
actual performance of
his duties
3.
Examples:
throwing bottles at the stage during a Miss
Barangay Coronation; intentional loud singing
and derisive laughter by the losing candidates
during the oath taking of the winning
candidates of the school student organization
If while addressing the employees, the mayor
was stoned by the accused the crime is the
complex crime of direct assault with
disturbance of public order
Committed by resisting
or seriously disobeying
a PIA or APIA
148
3.
4.
Acts punished
1.
2.
149
Concept
This is the crime committed by a person who
removes/springs a prisoner from jail or helps him
escape.
Elements
1.
2.
Committed in 2 Ways:
1. By removing a prisoner confined in jail or penal
institution to take away a person from
confinement with or withput the active
participation of the person released.
150
2.
b.
4.
c.
Concept
Qualifying Circumstance:
3 Kinds Of Evasion:
1. Evasion by Escaping under ordinary circumstances
(Article 157)
2. Evasion by Escaping on the occasion of a disorder
or mutiny ( Art. 158)
3. Evasion by Violation of a Conditional Pardon (Art.
159)
ARTICLE 157. EVASION OF SERVICE OF SENTENCE
Elements
1.
2.
3.
Qualifying Circumstances
If such evasion or escape takes place
1.
2.
3.
4.
Mitigating Circumstance:
Penalty decreased to the minimum period if the escape
of the prisoner shall take place outside of said
151
3.
4.
2.
152
Additional Requirements
1. The violation usually consists of the commission of
another offense (even if punishable by special
law). (Thus liable under Art 159 and for the crime
committed)
153
conditional
pardon
Who Can be Pardoned: General rule: A quasirecidivist may be pardoned at age 70 IF he shall
have already served out his original sentence.
Exception: unworthy or habitual delinquent.
If new felony is evasion of sentence, offender
is not a quasi-recidivist.
The penalty maximum period of the penalty
for the new felony should be imposed. Mitigating
TITLE IV
CRIMES AGAINST PUBLIC INTEREST
Concept
These
are
crimes
which
involve
deceit,
misrepresentation, or falsity against the public at large.
If the misrepresentation or deceit or falsity was
purposely availed of against a particular person the
same will constitute estafa.
Crimes against public interest
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
154
Acts punished
1.
2.
3.
3.
2.
3.
155
2.
3.
156
1.
2.
3.
2.
Possession;
With intent to utter; and
Knowledge.
1.
2.
157
2.
3.
b.
Elements
2.
3.
158
He applied
toothache drops on one side of the bill. He has a
mimeograph paper similar in texture to that of the
currency note and placed it on top of the twenty-peso
bill and put some weight on top of the paper. After
sometime, he removed it and the printing on the
twenty-peso bill was reproduced on the mimeo paper.
He took the reverse side of the P20 bill, applied
toothache drops and reversed the mimeo paper and
pressed it to the paper. After sometime, he removed it
and it was reproduced. He cut it out, scraped it a little
and went to a sari-sari store trying to buy a cigarette
with that bill. What he overlooked was that, when he
placed the bill, the printing was inverted. He was
apprehended and was prosecuted and convicted of
forgery. Was the crime of forgery committed?
159
2.
Falsification
of
a
Non-Legislative
Document
a). Document proper under Article 171 and
172
b). Wireless, Telegram, cablegram, telephone
Messages under Article 173
c). Certificates under Article 174
.
3. Private Documents - any other document,
deed or instruments executed by private
persons without the intervention of a notary
public or of other persons legally authorized,
by which some disposition or agreement is
proved, evidenced or set forth.
160
161
The
Arias
Principle
(Arias
vs.
Sandiganbayan, 180 SCRA 315) as
reiterated in Magsuce vs. Sandiganbayan
(Jan. 3, 1995) holds: All heads of offices
have a right to rely to a reasonable extent
on their subordinate and on the good faith
of those who prepared the documents,
and are not liable for the falsification
2.
3.
4.
Proof of Falsification
Coverage
Elements
1.
162
1.
2.
3.
c.
163
Requisites:
a) that persons participated in an act or
proceeding
b) that such person or persons made
statements in that act or proceeding
c) that the offender in making a document,
attributed to such person, statements
other than those in fact made by such
person.
Enemecio
v.
Office
Ombudsman,1/13/04
of
the
f.
MAKING
ALTERATIONS
(CHANGE)
OR
INTERCALATIONS
(INSERTIONS)
IN
A
GENUINE DOCUMENT WHICH CHANGES ITS
MEANING
Requisites:
a) That there be
an alteration or
intercalation (insertion) on a document
b) That it was made on a genuine document
c) That the alteration and intercalation has
changed the meaning of the document
d) That the change made the document
speak something false
164
Elements
a.
b.
c.
2.
3.
165
Falsification of
PRIVATE
Documents
Damage to third
party is an element
of the offense
No complex crime of
estafa
thru
falsification
of
private document.
Falsification by
Private Individual
(Art 172)
Prejudice
to
3rd
person is taken into
account. If damage
is not apparent or if
no intent to cause it,
no falsification.
Falsification of
PUBLIC/ OFFICIAL
Documents
Damage to third party
is immaterial;
What is punished is
the violation of public
faith and perversion of
truth
which
the
document proclaims
There is complex crime
when committed as a
means
to
commit
estafa.
Falsification by
Public Officer (Art
171)
Prejudice to 3rd person
is immaterial.
2.
166
2.
Falsifying
message;
wireless,
telegraph
or
telephone
Elements
1,
2.
3.
Section 5
Crimes Affecting Medical Certificate, Certificates
of Merit and the Like
Article 174.
False Medical Certificates, False
Certificates of Merits or Service, Etc.
Persons liable and Acts Punished
b.
c.
2.
3.
167
2.
3.
V. OTHER FALSITIES
Note: the subject of these falsities are not papers,
instruments or documents but : (1) official authority or
functions; (2) rank, title, names, (3) uniforms and
insignias and (4) testimonies under oath. These are
also capable of being falsified or subjected to acts of
deception.
Section 1
Art. 177. Usurpation of Authority or official
functions
Acts punished
168
a) conceal a crime,
b) evade the execution of a judgment, or
c) cause damage to public interest.
3.
Persons Liable
1. any person who uses any name different
from the one with which he was
registered at birth in the office of the
local civil registry, or with which he was
registered in the bureau of immigration
upon entry; or such substitute name as
may have been authorized by a competent
court.
2.
169
Use of Fictitious
Name
Element of publicity
must be present
Purpose
is
to
conceal a crime, to
evade the execution
of a judgment or to
cause damage to
public interest
Concealing true
name
Publicity
not
necessary
Purpose is only to
conceal his identity
1.
2.
3.
Section 2
False Testimony
False Testimony committed by a person who,
being under oath and required to testify as to the truth
of a certain matter at a hearing before a competent
authority, shall deny the truth or say something
contrary to it.
Three forms of false testimony
1.
2.
3.
Elements
1.
2.
3.
4.
170
3.
4.
Elements of perjury
1.
2.
171
3.
4.
Chapter 3
FRAUDS
Concept
1.
2.
172
Introduction
In an open market economy, the price of goods is
supposed to be determined by the relationship of
supply and demand. Hence, any act, scheme or
strategy, by which the price of goods and commodities
are intentionally affected, are punished. This includes
practices such as resorting to artificial shortage or
hoarding of goods, spreading false rumors.
Likewise there should be free competition in the
market. The law thus punishes any scheme of a person
or persons to monopolize goods and commodities,
including all acts to kill competitors, such as under
pricing of goods.
However, Article 186 is ineffective in the face of
conglomerates, mergers and combinations of big
Acts punished
1.
Combination or conspiracy
competition in the market;
to
prevent
free
Elements
2.
1.
2.
1.
2.
3.
3.
1.
2.
3.
173
restraint of trade
Elements
1.
2.
3.
TRADE-NAME or TRADE-MARK is a
word/s, name, title, symbol, emblem, sign or
device, or any combination thereof uses as an
advertisement, sign, label, poster, or otherwise, for
the purpose of enabling the public to distinguish
the business of the person who owns and uses
said trade-name or trade-mark
SERVICE MARK is a mark used in the sale
or advertising of services to identify the services of
one person and distinguish them from the services
of others and includes w/o limitation the marks,
names, symbols, titles, designations, slogans,
174
Infringement of
trademark or
tradename
Limited range
Identified
a peculiar
symbol or mark with his
goods and thereby has
acquired a property right
in such symbol or mark
Sells goods on which
trademark is affixed
175
Qualifying circumstances
(i) if the importation was through the use of a
diplomatic passport, diplomatic facilities or
any other means involving the offenders
official status
(ii) organizes, manages or acts as a financier
classification
of
dangerous
176
b.
Sale,
administration,
trading,
dispensation, delivery, distribution and
transportation of dangerous drugs.
Note: The quantity of the substance involved is
immaterial.
Qualifying circumstances
(i) within 100 meters from a school
(ii) if minors/ mentally incapacitated
individuals are used as runners, couriers
and messengers of drug pushers;
(iii) if the victim of the offense is a minor, or
should a prohibited/ regulated drug
e. Manufacture of DD
Aggravating circumstance: Clandestine lab
is undertaken under the ff circumstances
(i) any phase conducted in presence or with
help of minors
(ii) established/ undertaken w/in 100m of
residential, business, church or school
premises
(iii) lab secured/ protected by booby traps
(iv) concealed with legitimate business
operations
(v) employment of practitioner, chemical engr,
public official or foreigner
Qualifying
circumstance:
manages or acts as financier
reputation of place)
177
organizes,
178
POSSESSION.
i.
Qualifying circumstance:
(i) the land is part of the public domain
(ii) organizes, manages or acts as financier
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
2.
3.
179
The
presence
circumstances.
of
special
aggravating
180
Prohibition
against
plea
bargaining
and
disqualification from probation for those convicted
of drug trafficking
181
crime
182
183
in lieu of imprisonment
Rules
for
Lab
Examination
Apprehended/Arrested Offenders
of
184
9.
185
(2) R.A. No. 9287 (An Act Increasing the Penalties for
Illegal Numbers Games, Amending Certain
provisions of P.D. 1602 and for Other Purposes).
It is the fact that bets are made which makes the game
a gambling game. The game may be decided purely on
chance, purely on skill, or both.
It becomes illegal and therefore prohibited if it is not
authorized by a franchise.
1.
2.
186
187
(1) the public pays more than the price of the article
because the excess is used to defray or cover the cost
of the prize or (2) the article is not saleable without the
prize and it becomes saleable only because of the
prize.
ACTS PUNISHED
1. Any person who shall
directly or indirectly
take part in any illegal
or unauthorized
activities or games of:
(1) cockfighting,
jueteng, jai alai or horse
racing to include bookie
operations and game
fixing, numbers, bingo
and other forms of
lotteries;
(2) cara y cruz,
pompiang and the like;
prision correccional,
maximum, fine of
P6,000
prision mayor,
medium with
temporary absolute
disqualification or
fine of P6,000
prision correccional,
medium or fine
ranging from P400
to P2,000
188
Temporary absolute
disqualification
prision correccional
maximum or fine
ranging from P500
to P2,000
action
security officer, security
guard, watchman,
private or house
detective of hotels,
villages, buildings,
enclosures and the like
which have the
reputation of a
gambling place or
where gambling
activities are being held.
Act Punished
Game-fixing, point-shaving, game machination, as
defined in the preceding section, in connection with the
games of basketball, volleyball, softball, baseball;
chess, boxing bouts, jai-alia, sipa, pelota and all other
sports contests, games or races; as well as betting
therein except as may be authorized by law, is hereby
declared unlawful. (S2)
189
190
Illustrations:
(1)
(2)
(3)
191
4.
Test Of Obscenity
What is lewd is not necessarily obscene. Nudity is not
by itself obscenity. What then is the test for
obscenity? (i.e that which offends against chastity,
decency or delicacy)
1.
5.
3.
192
193
2.
3.
4.
194
Introduction
Although the offenders are principally public officers,
there are crimes under this title which may also be
committed by private persons by themselves as such,
like if the crime of Infidelity in the Custody of a
Prisoner and Malversation by a Private person under
Article 222. They may also be liable when they conspire
with the public officer or when they participate as
accomplices or accessories.
ART. 203 - WHO ARE PUBLIC OFFICERS
REQUISITES:
To be a public officer one must be
1. Taking part in the performance of public functions
in the government , or
performing in said
Government or in any of its branches public duties
as an employee, agent or subordinate official, of
any rank or class; and
2. That his authority to take part in the
performance of public functions or to
perform public duties must bea) by direct provision of the law, or
b) by popular election, or
c) by appointment by competent authority
(Arts. 204-212)
Dereliction of Duty
Breach of Office are classified into three forms
MALFEASANCE - doing an act prohibited by law or
that which ought not to be done or not supposed to be
done. As in arresting a person who has not committed
a crime or spending money under ones custody
MISFEASANCE - the improper or irregular
performance of an act which is allowed to be done
NONFEASANCE - the non performance, failure or
refusal to an act which one is required to do
Dereliction of Duty by Officers Related to
the Administration of Justice
Introduction
The offenses covered by Articles 204 to 209 pertain to
acts by Judges, Prosecutors and Lawyers (who are
officers of the Court). They are generally considered as
prevaricacion or crimes involving betrayal of trust
DERELICTION BY JUDGES (Articles 204 t0 207)
The Judges referred to are Trial Court Judges and not
to Judges of Collegial or Appellate Courts
(It) has no application to members of collegial courts
such as the Sandiganbayan or its divisions, who reach
their decision in consultation and accordingly render
their collective judgment after due deliberation (Cortes
vs. Chico-Nazario 422 SCRA 541)
ART. 204 KNOWINGLY RENDERING UNJUST
JUDGMENT
ELEMENTS:
1. That the offender is a judge
2. That he renders a judgment in a case submitted to
him for decision
3. That the judgment is unjust
4. That the judge knows that his judgment is unjust
JUDGMENT
the
final
consideration
and
determination of a court of competent jurisdiction
upon the matters submitted to it, in an action or
proceeding.
UNJUST JUDGMENT - one which is not in accordance
with the law and the evidence.
SOURCES OF UNJUST JUDGMENT
a) Error, or
b) ill-will or revenge, or
c) Bribery
195
ELEMENTS:
1. That the offender is a judge
2. That he renders a judgment in a case submitted to
him for decision
3. That the judgment is manifestly unjust
4. That it is due to his inexcusable negligence or
ignorance
MANIFESTLY UNJUST JUDGMENT - It so manifestly
contrary to law, that even a person having a meager
knowledge of the law cannot doubt the injustice.
Abuse of discretion or mere error of judgment is not
punishable.
ART.206 UNJUST INTERLOCUTORY ORDER
ELEMENTS:
1. That the offender is a judge
2. That he performs any of the following acts:
a) knowingly renders unjust interlocutory order or
decree, or
b) renders a manifestly unjust interlocutory order
or decree through inexcusable negligence or
ignorance
q - is one which decides on an issue related to the case
but does not decide the case on the merit or on the
evidence.
Example: granting bail to a non-bailable offense.
Note: Before a Judge can be charged for Rendering an
Unjust Judgment or Unjust Interlocutory Order, there
must be a final and authoritative judicial declaration
that the decision or order in question is indeed unjust.
The pronouncement may result from either:
1. An action for Certiorari or prohibition in the higher
court impugning the validity of the judgment or
196
1.
2.
3.
3.
Undertaking the
the same case
client
if the client
the defense
crime
197
to
the
4.
c).
the
198
Examples:
a). A stenographer received money such that
she did not record the testimony.
b). For money received, the clerk did not
include the case in the court calendar or
that he did not send the required notices
to witnesses.
c). Omission to accept and/or record a
pleading filed
Common Principles:
1.
199
2.
Officer
4.
attempted robbery
Robbery (294)
Direct bribery
Officer agrees to
perform or refrain
from doing an act.
Public officer receives
gift.
There is agreement
between the public
officer and the giver.
Illustrations:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Same.
No such
exist.
agreement
200
4.
5.
6.
2.
5.
2.
3.
201
MITIGATING
AND
EXTENUATING
CIRCUMSTANCES shall be considered by the
courts in the imposition of penalty
1.
202
H.
K.
H.
203
204
5.
205
the
the
for
be
must
refer
to
consummated
4.
206
207
Elements
1.
2.
3.
4.
3.
208
charge of
or is the
of funds
by public
2. Private properties:
209
3.
Penalty
The penalty depends on the amount of the fund or
property involved
1. The Penalty is the same whether the malversation is
intentional or through negligence. This is the
exception to the rule that the penalty for a crime is
lower if committed through negligence
2.The accused may be convicted of for culpable
malversation under an Information which charges
intentional malversation without need of amending
the original Information. This is because culpable
2.
3.
If there is falsification:
1.
the
210
vs.
ILLEGAL USE OF
MALVERSATION
PUBLIC FUNDS
OR PROPERTY
The offenders are accountable public officers in
both crimes.
The offender does not The offender in certain
derive any personal cases profits from the
gain or profit
proceeds of the crime.
1.
2.
3.
Acts punished
1.
2.
211
Persons liable:
1. A Public officer whose function or duty consists
primarily of taking custody of prisoners such as
personnel of the BJMP. At the time of the escape,
Elements
1. Offender is a private person;
2. The conveyance or custody of a prisoner or person
under arrest is confided to him;
3. The prisoner or person under arrest escapes;
4. Offender consents to the escape, or that the escape
takes place through his negligence.
Meaning of Prisoner: The term prisoner refers to:
Elements
2.
1.
2.
3.
Meaning of Escape
212
3.
Includes:
a). Failure to take precautionary measures to
prevent the escape such as by not checking on
whether the facilities permits a escape; not
checking on visitors who may bring in tools
with which to escape;
b). Becoming too familiar and friendly with the
prisoners resulting to decrease in vigilance
c). Laxity in escorting the prisoner or permitting
him to go to places where he is not supposed
to be brought, such as a restaurant
Kinds:
1. Through removal, concealment or destruction(Art.
226)
2.
By Breaking the seal (Art. 227)
3.
By opening of closed documents ( Art. 228)
Elements
1.
2.
3.
4.
213
4.
Elements
3.
4.
214
3.
1.
2.
1.
2.
(iv)
Elements
Acts punished
1.
3.
Elements
a.
b.
c.
d.
2.
INFIDELITY IN
THE CUSTODY OF
DOCUMENT OR
PAPERS BY
REMOVING THE
SAME
The papers do not
contain secrets but
their removal is for
an illicit purpose
a.
b.
d.
Elements
1.
2.
215
Open Disobedience
Elements
c.
Officer
Article 232.
Disobedience to Order of
Superior Officer When Said Order Was
Suspended by Inferior Officer
Article 234.
Office
Elements
a.
b.
c.
d
e.
1.
for
2.
the
3.
the
216
the
a.
b.
c.
Elements
a. Offender is entitled to hold a public office or
employment,
either
by
election
or
appointment;
b. The law requires that he should first be sworn
in and/or should first give a bond;
c. He assumes the performance of the duties and
powers of such office;
d. He has not taken his oath of office and/or
given the bond required by law.
2. Article 237. Prolonging Performance of
Duties and Powers
Anticipation of Duties of A
217
Concept:
ABANDONME
NT OF OFFICE
(ART. 238)
Committed by
any
public
officer
The
public
officer
abandons
his
office to evade
the discharge of
his duty
IN PROSECUTION OF
OFFENSES (ART. 208)
Committed only by public
officers who have the
duty
to
institute
prosecution
for
the
punishment of violations
of the law
The public officer does not
abandon his office but he
fails to prosecute an offense
by dereliction of duty or by
malicious tolerance of the
commission of offenses.
D. Usurpation of Powers:
Concept: These crimes refer to the interference
by an officer of one department with the functions
of the officials of the other departments of
government in violation of the principle of
separation of powers. They are different from the
crime of Usurpation of Authority which is usually
committed by private persons.
1. Article 239.
Powers
committed by the
injunctions against
matters,
NEGLIGENCE AND
TOLERANCE
Usurpation of Legislative
Elements
a.
b.
c.
218
Offender is a judge;
He (i) assumes a power pertaining to the
executive authorities, or (ii) obstructs the
executive authorities in the lawful exercise of
their powers.
Such as accepting official visitors and
presenting them the key to the city. Maybe
a.
b.
Elements
Offender is an executive or judicial officer;
He (i) makes general rules or regulations
beyond the scope of his authority or (ii)
attempts to repeal a law or (iii) suspends the
execution thereof.
issuance of baseless
purely administrative
d.
e.
c)
Elements
1.
2.
3.
4.
Elements
3.
Acts punished
1.
2.
2.
ELEMENTS:
1. That the offender is a public officer.
2. That he solicits or makes immoral or indecent
advances to a woman.
3. That such woman must bea) interested in matters pending before the
offender for decision, or with respect to which
he is required to submit a report to or consult
with a superior officer; or
b) under the custody of the offender who is a
warden or other public officer directly charged
with the care and custody of prisoners or
persons under arrest; or
219
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
Kinds
18.
19.
20.
a). As a condition in the (i) hiring, employment, reemployment of the victim (ii) for granting
favorable terms or compensations, or as
condition for promotion or grant of privileges
(iii) if the refusal results in limitations,
segregating or classifying the employee which
would discriminate, deprive or diminish
employment opportunities
b). Would impair the employees right or privileges
under existing labor laws
c). Would result in an intimidating, hostile or
offensive environment
2. Education or
3. Training environment
a). Victim is under the care, custody or supervision
of the offender, or one whose education or
training or apprenticeship is entrusted to the
offender (such as coaches of sports teams)
b). The demand is a condition to giving of a
passing grade, granting of scholarships,
payment of a stipend, allowance or other
benefit
c). or results to an intimidating or hostile or
offensive environment for the student, trainee
or apprentice
TITLE VIII.
CRIMES AGAINST PERSONS
Crimes against persons
1. Parricide (Art. 246);
220
Categories:
1. Destruction of Life
2. Physical Injuries
a. Mutilation
b. Serious
c. Less Serious
d. slight
3. Rape
a. Simple
b. Qualified
Destruction of Life in general.
Death and its inevitability has been the subject of
inquiry: philosophical, religious, biological and legal
approaches
Homicide - when used in its general sense it denotes
that the death of a person was not due to a suicide
or because of an accident or to natural causes but
because of the act of a person. The term
homicidal death refers to a death which was
caused by another either intentionally or by
negligence.
The following are the terms used depending on who
the victim was:
a). Parricide- the killing of ones father
b). Matricide- the killing of ones mother
c). Filicide- the killing of a child
d). Fratricide- the killing of ones brother or sister
e). Uxoricide- the killing of ones wife
f). Prolicide- the killing of ones offspring
g). Hosticide- the killing of an enemy
Elements
1.
2.
3.
A person is killed;
The deceased is killed by the accused
The deceased
a). Father or mother
b). Child whether legitimate or illegitimate
c). Legitimate ascendant
d). Legitimate descendant
e). Lawful spouse
221
2.
3.
Absolutory Cause.
222
2.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
4.
Elements
1. A person was killed;
2. Accused killed him;
3. The killing was attended by any of the following
qualifying circumstances
223
As in all other
killings, the accused may be convicted of homicide
even if the body of the victim has not been found,
so long as the corpus delicti has been proven.
In all crimes against persons in which the death of
the victim is an element of an offense, there must
be satisfactory evidence of (1) the fact of death
224
2.
4.
3.
225
1.
2.
d). Explosives
2. The act of tampering of the firearms serial number
3. Repacking or altering the composition of lawfully
manufactured explosives
4. Carrying any licensed firearm outside of ones
residence without any legal authority therefore i.e.
permit to carry outside ones residence
Penalty
The penalty for possession of a firearm was originally
fixed to be Reclusion Temporal Maximum to Reclusion
Perpetua. The penalty now depends on the caliber of
the firearm involved thus:
1. Prison Mayor medium period and a fine of
P30,000.00 for high powered firearms, such as
automatic firearms
2.
226
227
b.
c.
Elements
Article 255. Infanticide
Elements
1.
2.
Abortion
a
b.
Question:
Does the Philippines recognize The
reproductive freedom of a woman? ( Pro-Life vs Pro
Choice)
228
Elements
1.
2.
3.
4.
229
Acts Punished:
2.
Kinds:
(a) Mutilation
(b) Serious Physical
(c) Less Serious and
(d) Slight
How inflicted:
230
Physical Injuries
c.
3.
REQUISITES OF DEFORMITY
1. Physical ugliness
2. Permanent and definite abnormality
3. Must be conspicuous and visible
The crime remains even if the victim
undergoes surgery later or face lift or artificial
means to cover up the ugliness.
ATTEMPTED OR
FRUSTRATED
HOMICIDE
Attempted homicide
may be committed,
even if no physical
injuries are inflicted.
The offender has an
intent to kill the
offended party.
b.
c.
d.
4.
How committed
1.
2.
3.
4.
By
By
By
By
wounding;
beating;
assaulting; or
administering injurious substance.
2.
231
Becomes deformed; or
Deformity or disfigurement - a permanent,
visible ugliness which can not be cured by the
action of nature. These must be inflicted on
parts of the body which are normally exposed
and not usually covered by clothes.
The
penalty
is
higher
if
(Qualifying
Circumstances):
(1) it is committed against the relatives who maybe
victims of parricide (conformably with the
principle that the alternative circumstance of
relationship is aggravating in grave or less
grave offenses) and
(2) attended by the qualifying circumstances of
murder.
But these provisions will not apply if the injury of a
child was caused by excessive chastisement by a
parent.
2.
Penalties
If there was death, rape, sodomy or mutilation the
penalty is reclusion perpetua. For other injuries, the
penalty is higher than those provided under the
Revised Penal Code. Lack of Intent to commit so grave
a wrong is not allowed as a mitigating circumstance.
RA. 7610 The Child Abuse law
232
1.
2.
3.
b.
3.
1))
1. Where the Sex Is Objected to:
Offender is a man;
Offender had carnal knowledge of a woman;
Such act is accomplished under any of the
following circumstances:
a. By using force or intimidation;
b. When the woman is deprived of reason or
otherwise unconscious;
c. By means of fraudulent machination or
grave abuse of authority; or
d. When the woman is under 12 years of age
or demented.
233
otherwise unconscious
abuse of authority
234
1.
2.
3.
5.
4.
Mutilation
or
235
236
Persons Liable.
1. The offender is a private person and not a Public
Officer else the crime is Arbitrary Detention, unless
the latter has no duty to arrest or order the
detention of another.
2. One who furnished the place of detention is liable
as an accomplice unless he was in conspiracy with
the other accused.
237
4.
ILLEGAL
DETENTION
Committed by a
private
individual
who
unlawfully
kidnaps, detains or
otherwise deprives a
person of liberty.
Crime is against
personal liberty and
security
ARBITRARY
DETENTION
Committed by a
public officer or
employee
who
detains a person
without legal ground
Crime against the
fundamental law of
the State
238
Elements
1.
2.
3.
DELAY IN THE
UNLAWFUL
DELIVERY OF
ARREST (Art. 269)
DETAINED PERSONS
(Art. 125)
Detention is for some Detention
is
not
legal ground
authorized by law
Crime is committed by
failing to deliver such
person to the proper
judicial authority within
a certain period
Committed by making
an
arrest
not
authorized by law
239
2.
Elements
1.
2.
3.
240
2.
Acts punished:
1.
241
2.
2.
ABANDONMENT OF
MINOR BY
PERSONS
ENTRUSTED WITH
CUSTODY (ART.
277)
The custody of the
offender is specific,
that is , the custody
for the rearing or
education
of
the
minor
Minor is under 21 yrs.
of age
Minor is delivered to a
public institution or
other person
242
ABANDONMENT OF
MINOR (ART. 276)
Kinds:
1. Trespass to dwelling which, depending upon the
mode of entry, may be either: (a). Simple which is
entry without violence or (b) Qualified which is
entry with violence
2. Trespass to Estate or to Property
Article 280. Qualified Trespass to Dwelling
Elements
1.
2.
3.
violence or intimidation
o
o
o
1.
243
Elements
2.
3.
4.
OTHER FORMS OF
TRESPASS (ART.
281)
The offender is
person
any
Offender
enters
dwelling house
Place
entered
is
inhabited
Act constituting the
crime is entering the
dwelling against the
will of the owner
Prohibition to enter is
express or implied
244
1.
2.
3.
4.
2.
3.
4.
Examples:
(a). I will fail you if you will not introduce me
to your sister
(bi). I will report your absences to your
father if you do not let me copy your
answers
(c). I will tell your boyfriend about your
dating other men
2. Other Light Threats (Article 285)
Acts punished
1.
2.
3.
2.
245
Threats vs Robbery
If there is an intimidation and threat to inflict an injury
is coupled with a demand for money, when is it threats
and when is it robbery?
1. In threats, the harm/injury is still to be inflicted in
the future (future harm) whereas in robbery the
harm is to be inflicted right then and there, or that
it is actual and immediate ( immediate harm)
2. In threats, the harm maybe committed upon the
person or honor of the victim or that to his family,
or to his property whereas in robbery the harm is
to be inflicted does not include the honor of the
victim
3. In threats the doing of the harm may be
communicated through an intermediary whereas in
robbery the doing of the harm is always
communicated directly and personally to the victim
4. In threats gain is not immediate whereas in
robbery the gain is immediate.
the
the
Coercion
Concept: When a person takes the law into his own
hands i.e in that he is without authority of law or has
no right to act, and by means of violence, threat or
intimidation, he either:
1. Compels another to do something against his will,
whether it be right or wrong, or
2.
6.
246
1.
2.
3.
vexation.
b.
c.
2.
Elements:
a.
b.
c.
2.
247
Elements:
a.
Elements
1.
2.
3.
4.
Major Classification:
1. Robbery:
a) With Violence or Intimidation
Persons ( Hold-up)
b) With Force Upon Things ( Break-In)
2. Theft
a). Simple
b). Qualified
3.Estafa
4. Malicious Mischief
a). Ordinary
b). Special Cases
5. Arson
6. Violation of the Chattel Mortgage Law
Crimes against property
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Article 291.
Office
Title X.
Crimes Against Property
248
Against
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
public
249
Introduction:
The penalties are determined and based on
the extent or gravity of the violence employed,
its degree of intensity, and the resulting injury
or harm
There are several special complex crimes (also
known as Composite Crimes or Special
Indivisible Crimes) involving consummated
robbery, which according to the order of
severity are as follows:
1. Robbery with Homicide
2. Robbery with Rape
3. Robbery with Intentional Mutilations
4. Robbery with Arson
5. Robbery with Physical Injuries
6. Robbery with Unnecessary Violence
In cases where there was death, rape, or
physical injuries inflicted, the foregoing Order
of Severity must be followed in giving the
name of the crime. There will only be one
crime and one specific penalty but the rape
and lesser injuries will be utilized as
aggravating circumstances.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
250
Acts punished
1.
251
and
Frustrated
Robbery
with
Concept:
252
Attempted
Homicide
Principles:
General Principles:
2.
3.
253
2.
2.
3.
Principles:
254
Article 304.
Tools
Brigandage And
Highway Robbery
(Arts. 306, 307and P.D. 532)
Introduction:
Article 306 defining and penalizing brigandage has
been modified by Pres. Decree 532 defining and
punishing highway robbery and brigandage As thus
modified, the term brigandage and highway
robbery are used synonymously and they mean:
Elements
1.
2.
3.
2.
3.
255
Notes:
a.
b.
c.
4.
5.
Concept:
Theft is committed in four ways.
2.
3.
4.
Elements
1.
2.
3.
256
257
Identity theft
258
Principles:
1. Theft is consummated once the taking is
complete even if the accused was immediately
apprehended, or that it was snatched back from
him, or that he had no opportunity to dispose off
the thing.
2. There is no frustrated stage. Was there
possession of the thing or not? If there was, it is
consummated
o
3. There as many crimes of theft as there are
several occasions of taking, even if the victim is one
and the same person.
259
Theft is qualified if
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
This is modified by R.A. 6539 or the AntiCarnapping Law which defines the crime of
carnapping as Taking, with intent to gain, of
a motor vehicle belonging to another without
the latters consent, or by means of violence
against or intimidation of persons, or by using
force upon things
260
trust and
is purely
the victim,
taking are
the
accused
Article 311.
Theft of the Property of the
National Library or National Museum
261
Q:
A:
Elements
1.
2.
Notes:
Usurpation (of real property)
Kinds:
1. Occupation of Real Property or Usurpation of
Real Rights in Property (Article 312).
Concept:
The act of taking possession, by means of violence
against or intimidation of persons, of any real
property or shall usurp any real right in property
belonging to another.
Acts punished:
1.
2.
Elements
1.
2.
3.
4.
Notes:
262
Notes:
General Principles:
1. Generally there are only two ways of commission:
A. By misappropriation or abuse of confidence or
unfaithfulness
B. By False pretenses or by means of deceit
If one is charged under one mode, he cannot be
convicted under the other mode. Each mode is
distinct so that one cannot be said to include the
other.
263
a.
c.
Examples:
(i). A contract of agency may be converted into
a debtor-creditor relationship. Thus the agent
and the principal may agree that the agent
assume the payment of the value of the article
supposed to be sold on consignment. If the
agent failed to pay, there can be no charge of
estafa.
(ii). X discovered that the land sold to him is
non-existent and when he informed the seller,
the seller offered X an option of either
reimbursement of the money or that be given
another land in substitution. X agreed but found
the land given in substitution was not to his
liking. The subsequent agreement which is a
novation is a good defense to a charge for
estafa.
b.
264
3.
4.
2.
a. Obtaining credit
at
any of the establishments;
b. Using false pretense;
3.
a. Abandoning or surreptitiously
removing any part of his baggage in
the establishment;
b. After
obtaining
credit,
refreshment, accommodation;
c.
Without paying.
265
1.
2.
3.
4.
1.
2.
3.
2.
1.
food,
Examples of diversion:
(a). The article was to be sold in cash but the
accused sold it on credit
(b). Article is to be sold but the agent pledged
it and failed to account for the money
received
(c). Note however that if the article is to be
sold for a fixed amount but it was sold for
less, there is no estafa. But if the agent
misappropriates the proceeds there is
estafa
(d). If the article is only to be pledged but it
was instead sold, the crime is theft.
Element No. 1.
Element No. 2.
266
Third element:
267
The
deceit,
must
be
prior
or
simultaneously committed with the act of
defraudation
Illustrations:
Important considerations:
o
268
A:
269
Purpose:
To prevent the proliferation of worthless checks in
the mainstream of daily business and to avert not
only undermining of the banking system, but also
the infliction of damage and injury upon the trade
and commerce occasioned by the indiscriminate
issuance of such checks. (They are referred to
either as watered checks, bouncing checks, or
worthless checks)
B.P. 22 is constitutional and does not violate the
prohibition against non-imprisonment for non
payment of a debt. In truth it is not the non-
Acts Punished
1. The making, drawing or issuance of any check to
apply on account or for value, knowing at the time
of issue that the drawer does not have sufficient
funds in ,or credit, with the drawee bank. In this
case the check is a worthless check at the time it is
issued.
2.
Penalty.
Imprisonment of 30 days and a fine of not less
than but not more than double the amount of the
check but not to exceed P200,000.00
270
271
3.
4.
272
3.
4.
273
.
VI. Selling or mortgaging of real property used as bond
without judicial authority (in other words, selling,
mortgaging or encumbering real property or properties
with which the offender guaranteed the fulfillment of
his obligation as surety)
Elements
1.
2.
3.
4.
Notes:
This covers any form of deception where the
accused took advantage of the inexperience or
Acts punished
1. knowingly removing to any province or city any
property mortgaged under the chattel
mortgage law other than the one in which it
was located at the time of the execution of the
mortgage, without the written consent of the
mortgagee or his representative (i.e. his
executors, administrators or assigns)
Elements:
a.
b.
c.
Chattel Mortgage
Article 319.
Removal, Sale or Pledge of
Mortgaged Property
274
d.
e.
Notes:
the removal must be to defraud the
mortgagee and not due to any valid
reason, such as a change of address, or if
the properties are vehicles which travel
from one place to another . The purpose
is so that the mortgagor cannot foreclose
on the mortgage
But if the creditor chooses to collect by
filing a suit, the debtor is relieved from
liability under Article 318
2.
the
the
the
the
Elements:
a.
b.
c.
1. Arson
Laws Involved
1. P.D.1613 which repealed Articles 320 to 326-B
of the Revised Penal Code
2. P.D. 1744 which revived Article 320
3. R.A. 7659 which amended Article 320 as
revived.
Concept:
3).
property
275
Acts punished
1.
2.
Concept:
3.
4.
Elements
1.
2.
3.
Principles
or
acts
of
276
of
the
the
act
Example: Writing
vandalism
Introduction:
7.
8.
9.
10.
I. Introduction:
A. (Personal Opinion). In view of the provisions of
R.A. 8353 ( The Anti Rape Law of l997), R.A.
9208 ( The Anti Trafficking in Persons Act of
2003) the only crimes against chastity should be
:
This includes between parents and children in- law; step children and step parents;
adopter and adopted, including recognized
natural children with their natural parents
Spouses include common-laws spouses but not
those simply in a live-in-relationship. This is
because the property relations between
common-law spouses is that of the coownership
Spouses who are legally separated are
included so long as there was no dissolution
yet of their property
TITLE XI
CRIMES AGAINST CHASTITY
Crimes against chastity
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
277
Rationale:
1. The possibility of introducing spurious heirs
(Criticism: this reason will not hold water if the
woman is proven to be sterile)
2. Violation of the marriage vows and the sanctity
of the marriage based on the exclusivity of the
sexual partner.
Defenses in Adultery
1.
2.
Elements
2.
1.
2.
3.
3.
Notes:
278
279
c.
1.
Elements
a.
b.
c.
d.
2.
1.
2.
3.
Priest;
House servant;
Domestic;
Person liable
Kinds:
1.
Article 338.
his
Simple Seduction
Elements
1.
2.
3.
4.
Acts punished
280
3.
c.
Notes:
Elements
1.
2.
3.
4.
Abduction
Concept:
281
Notes:
b.
1.
2.
3.
a.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Defenses in
Abduction
Acts
of
Lasciviousness
and
282
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Simulation of births;
Substitution of one child for another;
Concealing or abandoning any legitimate child
with intent to cause such child to lose its civil
status.
Principles
Other
Related
Crimes
usurpation/impersonation
Illegal Marriages
Kinds of Illegal Marriages (i.e. those not recognized
or prohibited by law)
1. Bigamous Marriages (Art. 349)
2. Those contracted contrary to the Marriage Law
(Art. 350)
3. Premature Marriages (Art. 351)
Article 349. Bigamy
Concept:
The crime committed by a married person who
contracts a second or subsequent marriage before the
first has been legally dissolved or before the absent
spouse had been declared presumptively dead.
Elements
1.
2.
3.
Concept:
The crime committed by any person who shall usurp
the civil status of another. It is the act of pretending to
be another person so as to enjoy the latters rights,
filiations, paternity or conjugal rights, including his
profession or public status. It involves the idea of
impersonating another.
283
involving
4.
by reckless
ascertain the
(ii) one who
thinking it is
Notes:
o
3.
4.
5.
284
1.
2.
TITLE XIII
CRIMES AGAINST HONOR
Crimes against honor
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Introduction:
285
First Element:
imputation
There
must
be
defamatory
286
o
o
iii)
287
288
o
2.
Qualifiedly/Conditionally
Communication:
Privileged
289
290
The
proceeding
must
not
be
confidential, such as the hearings before
the Senate, as opposed to the close
door executive sessions of the senate .
Thus if the report is with respect to a
public record, it refers only to those
made accessible to the public which
may be revealed for public interest or
protection of the public.
Examples
(i). A news report on the welfare of youth and
students in a school allegedly staffed by
incompetents, or a dumping ground of misfit
teachers, concerns a matter of public
interest.
(ii). An editorial criticizing the owner of a ship
which sunk, for his delay in extending
financial help to the family of the victims, is
not libelous as the in action is a matter of
public interest.
(iii). The arrest and prosecution of law violator is
a matter in which the public has a right to
know. Thus there is no liability for reporting
that a lady was arrested for selling shabu or
that a person was charged in court or
convicted by a court for Estafa. The persons
in question cannot file a case for libel.
(iv). A radio announcer lambasts a family for
their adamant refusal to vacate and remove
their structure inside a park.
2. Comments and Criticisms
Actuations of Public Figures
on
the
291
The
republisher
who
accurately
and
disinterestedly reports certain defamatory
statements made against public figures, is
shielded from liability, regardless of his
subjective awareness of the truth or falsity of
the accusation. ( See Fil Broadcasting Net
Work vs. AGO Medical and Educational Center,
448 SCRA 413)
Example: A parent of a student goes on radio
to denounce a school teacher as being
incompetent, absentee, bias and prejudiced. A
news reporter quoted the accusations in his
news article. He is not liable even if he
personally knows the accusations are untrue.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Writing;
Printing;
Lithography;
Engraving;
Radio;
Photograph;
Painting;
Theatrical exhibition;
Cinematographic exhibition; or
Any similar means.
2.
3.
Factors to consider:
1. The expression used including their sense,
grammatical significance and accepted
ordinary meaning
2. The personal relations of the accused and the
offended party, as when both are bitter
enemies
3. The special circumstances of the case and its
antecedents, such as the time, place and
occasion of the utterances, persons present
4. The social standing and position of the
offended party
Principles:
1. This a form of blackmailing because there is an
extortion for money under threat of so called
exposing a person. This is often called
demand for Hush Money
2. If both modes were committed by a single
person, there is only one offense. If committed
by two different persons there be two separate
offenses, unless both are in conspiracy.
3. The crime is consummated once the threats or
offers were made.
Examples:
1. The accused threatened to publish in a weekly
periodical certain letters written by a married
woman unless she paid a certain sum of money.
2. The producer of a TV Program demanded money
from a politician otherwise he would expose the
sexcapades of the politician.
Article 357.
Prohibited Publication of Acts
Referred to in the Course of Official Proceedings
Elements
1.
2.
292
Notes:
293
Defenses Allowed:
1. If both the victim and the accused were
negligent, the accused may be held liable
under the Doctrine of Last Clear Chance i.e it
was he who had the sufficient opportunity to
avoid the accident after noticing the danger
2. Emergency Rule: due to the negligence of
another, the accused was placed in an
emergency and compelled to act immediately
to avoid an impending danger, and in so doing
he injured another, even if his choice of action
was not the wisest under circumstances. This
is similar to the exempting circumstance of
accident.
3. The defense of contributory negligent does not
apply in criminal cases committed through
reckless imprudence, since one cannot allege
the negligence of another to evade the effects
of his own negligence ( Manzanares s. PP, 504
SCRA 354)
4. Contributory negligence on the part of the victim
merely mitigates the civil liability of the
accused.
NOTE: If, in a vehicular accident, the accused
abandons the victims, this act will result to the
imposition of a penalty one degree higher. Except in
the following instances:
a). if he leaves because he is in imminent danger of
being harmed
b). he leaves to report to the police
c). or to summon a physician, nurse or doctor.
294
E.
1. Plunder:
-o0o-
GOD BLESS
-o0o-
GOOD LUCK
Prepared by:
ELMER MANUEL SAGSAGO
CITY PROSECUTOR II
PROFESSOR: SCHOOL OF LAW
SAINT LOUIS UNIVERSITY
UNIVERSITY OF BAGUIO
X------------------------------------------------X
-o0o-
295