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VOL. 250, DECEMBER 4, 1995 581
People vs. Salle, Jr.
G.R. No. 103567. December 4, 1995.
*
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs.
FRANCISCO SALLE, JR. Y GERCILLA @ KA NONOY,
RICKY MENGOTE Y CUNTADO @ KA RICKY/KA
LIZA/KA JUN, and TEN JOHN DOES, accused.
FRANCISCO SALLE, JR., Y GERCILLA and RICKY
MENGOTE Y CUNTADO, accusedappellants.
Constitutional Law; Pardons; Criminal Law; Judgments;
Where the pardoning power is subject to the limitation of conviction,
it may be exercised at any time after conviction even if the judgment
is on appeal, but where the requirement is final judgment, no
pardon may be extended before a judgment of conviction becomes
final.Where the pardoning power is subject to the limitation of
conviction, it may be exercised at any time after conviction even if
the judgment is on appeal. It is, of course, entirely different where
the requirement is final conviction, as was mandated in the
original provision of Section 14, Article IX of the 1973 Constitution,
or conviction by final judgment, as presently prescribed in Section
19, Article VII of the 1987 Constitution. In such a case, no pardon
may be extended before a judgment of conviction becomes final.
Same; Same; Same; Same; When judgments of conviction
become final.A judgment of conviction becomes final (a) when no
appeal is seasonably perfected, (b) when the accused commences to
serve the sentence, (c) when the right to appeal is expressly waived
in writing, except where the death penalty was imposed by the trial
court, and (d) when the accused applies for probation, thereby
waiving his right to appeal. Where the judgment of conviction is still
pending appeal and has not yet therefore attained finality, as in the
instant case, executive clemency may not yet be granted to the
appellant.
Same; Same; Separation of Powers; The reason the
Constitutional Commission adopted the conviction by final
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judgment requirement was to prevent the President from exercising
executive power in derogation of the judicial power.The reason
the Constitutional Commission adopted the conviction by final
judgment requirement, reviving in effect the original provision of
the 1973 Constitution on the pardoning
____________
*
EN BANC.
582
582 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
People vs. Salle, Jr.
power, was, as expounded by Commissioner Napoleon Rama, to
prevent the President from exercising executive power in derogation
of the judicial power.
Same; Same; Same; An appeal brings the entire case within the
exclusive jurisdiction of the appellate court, and a becoming regard
for the doctrine of separation of powers demands that such exclusive
authority of the appellate court be fully respected and kept
unimpaired.Indeed, an appeal brings the entire case within the
exclusive jurisdiction of the appellate court. A becoming regard for
the doctrine of separation of powers demands that such exclusive
authority of the appellate court be fully respected and kept
unimpaired. For truly, had not the present Constitution adopted the
conviction by final judgment limitation, the President could, at
any time, and even without the knowledge of the court, extend
executive clemency to any one whom he, in good faith or otherwise,
believes to merit presidential mercy.
Same; Same; Same; Where the President is not so prevented by
the Constitution from granting pardon before final conviction, not
even Congress can impose any restriction to prevent a presidential
folly.It cannot be denied that under the Jones Law and the 1981
amendments to the 1973 Constitution on the pardoning power
which did not require conviction, the President had unimpeded
power to grant pardon even before the criminal case could be heard.
And under the 1935 Constitution which required conviction only,
the power could be exercised at any time after conviction and
regardless of the pendency of the appeal. In either case, there could
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be the risk not only of a failure of justice but also of a frustration of
the system of administration of justice in view of the derogation of
the jurisdiction of the trial or appellate court. Where the President is
not so prevented by the Constitution, not even Congress can impose
any restriction to prevent a presidential folly. Hence, nothing but a
change in the constitutional provision consisting in the imposition of
conviction by final judgment requirement can change the rule.
The new Constitution did it.
Same; Same; Before an appellant may be validly granted
pardon, he must first ask for the withdrawal of his appealthe
appealed conviction must first be brought to finality.Hence,
before an appellant may be validly granted pardon, he must first
ask for the withdrawal of his appeal, i.e., the appealed conviction
must first be brought to finality.
Same; Same; Rule in the processing and grant of pardons.We
now declare that the conviction by final judgment limitation under
583
VOL. 250, DECEMBER 4, 1995 583
People vs. Salle, Jr.
Section 19, Article VII of the present Constitution prohibits the
grant of pardon, whether full or conditional, to an accused during
the pendency of his appeal from his conviction by the trial court.
Any application therefor, if one is made, should not be acted upon or
the process toward its grant should not be begun unless the appeal
is withdrawn. Accordingly, the agencies or instrumentalities of the
Government concerned must require proof from the accused that he
has not appealed from his conviction or that he has withdrawn his
appeal. Such proof may be in the form of a certification issued by
the trial court or the appellate court, as the case may be. The
acceptance of the pardon shall not operate as an abandonment or
waiver of the appeal, and the release of an accused by virtue of a
pardon, commutation of sentence, or parole before the withdrawal of
an appeal shall render those responsible therefor administratively
liable. Accordingly, those in custody of the accused must not solely
rely on the pardon as a basis for the release of the accused from
confinement.
APPEAL from a decision of the Regional Trial Court of
Quezon City, Br. 88.
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The facts are stated in the resolution of the Court.
The Solicitor General for plaintiff-appellee.
Free Legal Assistance Group (FLAG) for Ricky
Mengote and Francisco Salle, Jr.
R E S O L U T I O N
DAVIDE, JR., J.:
For resolution is the enforceability of the conditional pardon
granted to accused-appellant Ricky Mengote during the
pendency in this Court of his appeal from his conviction by
the trial court.
In the decision
1
dated 18 November 1991 of Branch 88 of
the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Quezon City in Criminal
Case No. Q-90-11835, the accused-appellants were found
guilty beyond reasonable doubt as co-principals of the
compound crime of murder and destructive arson and were
each sentenced to suffe
______________
1 Per Judge Tirso D.C. Velasco.
584
584 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
People vs. Salle, Jr.
the penalty of reclusion perpetua and to pay, jointly and
severally, an indemnity in the sum of P50,000.00 to the
heirs of the victim.
2
The appellants seasonably filed their Notice of Appeal.
On 24 March 1993, this Court accepted the appeal. On 6
January 1994, however, appellant Francisco Salle, Jr. filed
an Urgent Motion to Withdraw Appeal. The Court then
required his counsel, Atty. Ida May Lao of the Free Legal
Assistance Group (FLAG) to verify the voluntariness of the
aforesaid motion.
In her Manifestation with Motion to Withdraw Appeal,
Atty. Lao informed this Court that her verification disclosed
that Salle signed the motion without the assistance of
counsel on his misimpression that the motion was merely a
bureaucratic requirement necessary for his early release
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from the New Bilibid Prison (NBP) following the grant of a
conditional pardon by the President on 9 December 1993.
He was discharged from the NBP on 28 December 1993. She
further informed the Court that appellant Ricky Mengote
was, on the same dates, granted a conditional pardon and
released from confinement, and that he immediately left for
his province without consulting her. She then prays that
this Court grant Salles motion to withdraw his appeal and
consider it withdrawn upon his acceptance of the conditional
pardon.
Until now, Mengote has not filed a motion to withdraw
his appeal.
In the resolution of 23 March 1994, this Court granted
Salles motion to withdraw his appeal and considered this
case closed and terminated insofar as he is concerned.
On 3 June 1993, Assistant Director Jesus P. Villanueva
of the Bureau of Corrections submitted certified photocopies
of the conditional pardon granted separately to Salle
3
and
Mengote
4
and of their certificates of release.
5
The said copies
of the condi-
____________
2 Rollo, 19-31.
3 Rollo, 75.
4 Id., 73.
5 Id., 72, 74.
585
VOL. 250, DECEMBER 4, 1995 585
People vs. Salle, Jr.
tional pardon state, among other things, that it is upon
acceptance of the pardon that the appellants will be released
from confinement. But there is nothing to show when the
appellants accepted the pardon.
In its Comment of 17 August 1994, the Office of the
Solicitor General asserted that with their acceptance of the
conditional pardon, the appellants impliedly admitted their
guilt and accepted their sentence, and hence, the appeal
should be dismissed.
6
After taking into consideration Section 19, Article VII of
the Constitution which provides that the President may,
except in cases of impeachment or as otherwise provided in
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1.
2.
the Constitution, grant pardon after conviction by final
judgment, this Court resolved to require
The Office of the Solicitor General and the counsel for the
accused-appellants to submit, within thirty (30) days from
notice hereof, their respective memoranda on the issue of
the enforceability of the conditional pardon; and
The Presidential Committee for the Grant of Bail, Release or
Pardon to inform the Court, within ten (10) days from notice
hereof, why it recommended to the President the grant of
the conditional pardon despite the pendency of the appeal.
7
In a Comment submitted on behalf of the Presidential
Committee for the Grant of Bail, Release, or Pardon,
Assistant Chief State Prosecutor Nilo C. Mariano avers that
the Secretariat assisting the Committee has a standing
agreement with the FLAG and other human rights
organizations that it will recommend to the Presidential
Committee for conditional pardon by the President of
convicted persons who may have been convicted of crimes
against national security and public order or of common
crimes which appear to have been committed in pursuit of
their political objectives; and that where the said convicted
persons have pending appeals before the appellate court,
the lawyers of the said organizations, particularly the
FLAG, will take care of
______________
6 Id., 79.
7 Rollo, 84.
586
586 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
People vs. Salle, Jr.
filing the appropriate motions for the withdrawal of their
appeal considering that presidential pardon may be
extended only to those serving sentence after final
conviction. Notwithstanding that agreement, before it
recommends to the Committee the grant of conditional
pardon, the Secretariat also checks with the Bureau of
Corrections the carpeta or records of recommendees whether
they have pending appeals so that those concerned may be
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properly advised to withdraw the same. Mariano further
contends that per information given to the Secretariat by
Assistant Director Villanueva, Mengotes carpeta or prison
record does not show that he has a pending appeal with the
Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court. For that reason, the
Secretariat was not able to advise those concerned to take
appropriate steps for the withdrawal of the appeal before it
recommended to the Committee the grant of conditional
pardon in favor of Mengote. Mariano then assures the Court
that there was no intention on the part of the Secretariat
and the Committee to violate Section 19, Article VII of the
Constitution, and that what happened was a clear
misappreciation of facts due to the incomplete records of
Mengote.
In its Memorandum filed for the Appellee on 15
December 1994; the Office of the Solicitor General
maintains that the conditional pardon granted to appellant
Mengote is unenforceable because the judgment of
conviction is not yet final in view of the pendency in this
Court of his appeal.
On the other hand, the FLAG, through Atty. Lao,
submits that the conditional pardon extended to Mengote is
valid and enforceable. Citing Monsanto vs. Factoran, Jr.,
8
it
argues that although Mengote did not file a motion to
withdraw the appeal, he was deemed to have abandoned the
appeal by his acceptance of the conditional pardon which
resulted in the finality of his conviction.
The pivotal issue thus raised is the enforceability of a
pardon granted to an accused during the pendency of his
appeal from a judgment of conviction by the trial court.
_______________
8 170 SCRA 190 [1989].
587
VOL. 250, DECEMBER 4, 1995 587
People vs. Salle, Jr.
This calls for a review of the Philippine laws on presidential
pardons. We shall start with the Jones Law.
9
Section 21
thereof provided in part as follows:
SEC. 21 That the supreme executive power shall be vested in an
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executive officer, whose official title shall be The Governor-General
of the Philippine Islands. . . . He is hereby vested with the
exclusive power to grant pardons and reprieves and remit fines and
forfeitures. . . .
Then came the 1935 Constitution. Paragraph 6, Section 10,
Article VII thereof provided as follows:
(6) The President shall have the power to grant reprieves,
commutations, and pardons, and remit fines and forfeitures, after
conviction, for all offenses, except in cases of impeachment, upon
such conditions and with such restrictions and limitations as he may
deem proper to impose. He shall have the power to grant amnesty
with the concurrence of the Congress.
This provision differed from that of the Jones Law in some
respects. Thus, in People vs. Vera,
10
this Court held:
Under the Jones Law, as at common law, pardon could be granted
any time after the commission of the offense, either before or after
conviction (Vide Constitution of the United States, Art. II, see. 2; In
re Lontok [1922], 43 Phil. 293). The Governor-General of the
Philippines was thus empowered, like the President of the United
States, to pardon a person before the facts of the case were fully
brought to light. The framers of our Constitution thought this
undesirable and, following most of the state constitutions, provided
that the pardoning power can only be exercised after conviction.
The requirement of after conviction operated as one of the
limitations on the pardoning power of the President. Thus:
It should be observed that there are two limitations upon the
exercise of this constitutional prerogative by the Chief Executive,
_____________
9
Philippine Autonomy Act.
10
65 Phil. 56, 97-98 [1937].
588
588 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
People vs. Salle, Jr.
namely: (a) that the power be exercised after conviction; and (b)
that such power does not extend to cases of impeachment.
11
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The 1973 Constitution went further by providing that
pardon could be granted only after final conviction. Section
14 of Article IX thereof reads as follows:
The Prime Minister may, except in cases of impeachment, grant
reprieves, commutations, and pardons, remit fines and forfeitures,
after final conviction, and, with the concurrence of the National
Assembly, grant amnesty. (emphasis supplied)
The 1981 amendments to the 1973 Constitution, however,
removed the limitation of final conviction, thereby bringing
us back to the aforementioned provision of the Jones Law.
Section 11, Article VII of the 1973 Constitution, as thus
amended, reads:
The President may, except in cases of impeachment, grant
reprieves, commutations and pardons, remit fines and forfeitures
and, with the concurrence of the Batasang Pambansa, grant
amnesty.
But the said limitation was restored by the present
Constitution. Section 19, Article VII thereof reads as follows:
Except in cases of impeachment, or as otherwise provided in this
Constitution, the President may grant reprieves, commutations, and
pardons, and remit fines and forfeitures, after conviction by final
judgment.
He shall also have the power to grant amnesty with the
concurrence of a majority of all the Members of the Congress.
(emphasis supplied)
Where the pardoning power is subject to the limitation of
conviction, it may be exercised at any time after conviction
even if the judgment is on appeal. It is, of course, entirely
different where the requirement is final conviction, as was
mandated in the original provision of Section 14, Article IX
of the 1973 Constitution, or conviction by final judgment
as presently
_______________
11 Cristobal vs. Labrador, 71 Phil. 34, 38 [1940].
589
VOL. 250, DECEMBER 4, 1995 589
People vs. Salle, Jr.
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prescribed in Section 19, Article VII of the 1987
Constitution. In such a case, no pardon may be extended
before a judgment of conviction becomes final.
A judgment of conviction becomes final (a) when no
appeal is seasonably perfected, (b) when the accused
commences to serve the sentence, (c) when the right to
appeal is expressly waived in writing, except where the
death penalty was imposed by the trial court, and (d) when
the accused applies for probation, thereby waiving his right
to appeal.
12
Where the judgment of conviction is still
pending appeal and has not yet therefore attained finality,
as in the instant case, executive clemency may not yet be
granted to the appellant.
We are not, however, unmindful of the ruling of this
Court in People vs. Crisola
13
that the grant of executive
clemency during the pendency of the appeal serves to put an
end to the appeal. Thus:
The commutation of the penalty is impressed with legal significance.
That is an exercise of executive clemency embraced in the
pardoning power. According to the Constitution: The President
may, except in cases of impeachment, grant reprieves,
commutations and pardons, remit fines and forfeitures and, with
the concurrence of the Batasang Pambansa, grant amnesty. Once
granted, it is binding and effective. It serves to put an end to this
appeal.
It must, nevertheless, be noted that the constitutional
provision quoted is that of the 1973 Constitution, as
amended, which authorized the exercise of the pardoning
power at anytime, either before or after conviction. Also, in
Monsanto vs. Factoran,
14
this Court stated that the
acceptance of a pardon amounts to an abandonment of an
appeal, rendering the conviction final; thus:
The 1981 amendments had deleted the earlier rule that clemency
could be extended only upon final conviction, implying that
clemency
_____________
12
FLORENZ D. REGALADO, Remedial Law Compendium, vol. Two [1989],
370; Section 7, Rule 120, Rules of Court.
13
128 SCRA 1, 3 [1984].
14
Supra, note 8 at 196-197.
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590
590 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
People vs. Salle, Jr.
could be given even before conviction. Thus, petitioners
unconditional pardon was granted even as her appeal was pending
in the High Court. It is worth mentioning that under the 1987
Constitution, the former limitation of final conviction was restored.
But be that as it may, it is our view that in the present case, it is not
material when the pardon was bestowed, whether before or after
conviction, for the result would still be the same. Having accepted
the pardon, petitioner is deemed to have abandoned her appeal and
her unreversed conviction by the Sandiganbayan assumed the
character of finality.
This statement should not be taken as a guiding rule for it is
nothing but an obiter dictum. Moreover, the pardon
involved therein was extended on 17 December 1984 or
under the regime of Section 11, Article VII of the 1973
Constitution, as amended, which allowed the grant of
pardon either before or after conviction.
The reason the Constitutional Commission adopted the
conviction by final judgment requirement, reviving in
effect the original provision of the 1973 Constitution on the
pardoning power, was, as expounded by Commissioner
Napoleon Rama, to prevent the President from exercising
executive power in derogation of the judicial power.
15
Indeed, an appeal brings the entire case within the
exclusive jurisdiction of the appellate court. A becoming
regard for the doctrine of separation of powers demands that
such exclusive authority of the appellate court be fully
respected and kept unimpaired. For truly, had not the
present Constitution adopted the conviction by final
judgment limitation, the President could, at any time, and
even without the knowledge of the court, extend executive
clemency to any one whom he, in good faith or otherwise,
believes to merit presidential mercy. It cannot be denied
that under the Jones Law and the 1981 amendments to the
1973 Constitution on the pardoning power which did not
require conviction, the President had unimpeded power to
grant pardon even before the criminal case could be heard.
And under the 1935 Constitution which required
conviction only, the power could be exercised at any time
after conviction and regardless of the
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_____________
15 Record of the Constitutional Commission, vol. 2, 395.
591
VOL. 250, DECEMBER 4, 1995 591
People vs. Salle, Jr.
pendency of the appeal. In either case, there could be the
risk not only of a failure of justice but also of a frustration of
the system of administration of justice in view of the
derogation of the jurisdiction of the trial or appellate court.
Where the President is not so prevented by the
Constitution, not even Congress can impose any restriction
to prevent a presidential folly.
16
Hence, nothing but a
change in the constitutional provision consisting in the
imposition of conviction by final judgment requirement
can change the rule. The new Constitution did it.
Hence, before an appellant may be validly granted
pardon, he must first ask for the withdrawal of his appeal,
i.e.,the appealed conviction must first be brought to finality.
Accordingly, while this Court, in its resolution of 21
March 1991 in People vs. Pedro Sepada,
17
dismissed the
appeal for having become moot and academic in view of the
parole granted to the appellant, it explicitly declared the
necessity of a final judgment before parole or pardon could
be extended. Thus:
CONSIDERING THE FOREGOING, the COURT RESOLVED to
DISMISS the appeal for having become moot and academic. To
avoid any possible conflict with the judicial determination of
pending appeals, the Court further DIRECTED the Board of
Pardons and Parole to adopt a system which enables it to ascertain
whether a sentence has become final and executory and has, in fact,
been executed before acting on any application for parole or pardon.
The Court Administrator shall coordinate with the Department of
Justice on how this may be best achieved. (Emphasis supplied).
Recently, in its resolution of 31 January 1995 in People vs.
Hinlo,
18
this Court categorically declared to be in clear
violation of the law the practice of processing applications
for pardon or parole despite pending appeals. This Court
resolved therein as follows:
IN VIEW OF THE FOREGOING, in order to put a stop to the
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(1)
(2)
(3)
practice of processing applications for pardon and parole despite
pend-
______________
16
Cristobal vs. Labrador, supra note 11.
17
G.R. No. L-47514.
18
G.R. No. 110035.
592
592 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
People vs. Salle, Jr.
ing appeals which is in clear violation of the law, the Court
Resolved to:
REQUIRE Atty. Conrado H. Edig, counsel de parte of
accused Bernardo Hinlo, Catalino Capin, Martin Hinlo and
Cecerio Ongco, who were given pardon, to secure and file
the withdrawal of the appeals of said accused within ten
days from receipt of this Resolution;
CALL the attention of the Presidential Committee to observe
the proper procedure as required by law before granting
bail, pardon or parole in cases before it; and
REMIND the Board of Pardons and Parole about the
Courts directive in the People v. Sepada case. (Emphasis
supplied).
The above pronouncements of this Court in Sepada and in
Hinlo may still be unheeded, either through deliberate
disregard thereof or by reason of an erroneous application of
the obiter dictum in Monsanto or of the ruling in Crisola.
Hence, the need for decisive action on the matter.
We now declare that the conviction by final judgment
limitation under Section 19, Article VII of the present
Constitution prohibits the grant of pardon, whether full or
conditional, to an accused during the pendency of his appeal
from his conviction by the trial court. Any application
therefor, if one is made, should not be acted upon or the
process toward its grant should not be begun unless the
appeal is withdrawn. Accordingly, the agencies or
instrumentalities of the Government concerned must
require proof from the accused that he has not appealed
from his conviction or that he has withdrawn his appeal.
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Such proof may be in the form of a certification issued by the
trial court or the appellate court, as the case may be. The
acceptance of the pardon shall not operate as an
abandonment or waiver of the appeal, and the release of an
accused by virtue of a pardon, commutation of sentence, or
parole before the withdrawal of an appeal shall render those
responsible therefor administratively liable. Accordingly,
those in custody of the accused must not solely rely on the
pardon as a basis for the release of the accused from
confinement.
593
VOL. 250, DECEMBER 4, 1995 593
People vs. Salle, Jr.
And now on the instant case. Considering that appellant
Ricky Mengote has not filed a motion to withdraw his appeal
up to this date the conditional pardon extended to him
should not have been enforced. Nonetheless, since he stands
on the same footing as the accused-appellants in the Hinlo
case, he may be freed from the full force, impact, and effect
of the rule herein pronounced subject to the condition set
forth below. This rule shall fully bind pardons extended
after 31 January 1995 during the pendency of the grantees
appeal.
WHEREFORE, counsel for accused-appellant Ricky
Mengote y Cuntado is hereby given thirty (30) days from
notice hereof within which to secure from the latter the
withdrawal of his appeal and to submit it to this Court. The
conditional pardon granted the said appellant shall be
deemed to take effect only upon the grant of such
withdrawal. In case of non-compliance with this Resolution,
the Director of the Bureau of Corrections must exert every
possible effort to take back into his custody the said
appellant, for which purpose he may seek the assistance of
the Philippine National Police or the National Bureau of
Investigation.
Let copies of this Resolution be furnished the Office of the
President, the Department of Justice, the Board of Pardons
and Parole, and the Presidential Committee for the Grant of
Bail, Release, or Pardon.
SO ORDERED.
Narvasa (C.J.), Feliciano, Padilla, Regalado, Romero,
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Melo, Puno, Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza, Francisco,
Hermosisima, Jr. and Panganiban, JJ., concur.
Bellosillo, J., See concurring.
BELLOSILLO, J., Concurring:
I concur. The grant of reprieves, commutations and pardons,
as well as the remission of fines and forfeitures by the
President may be done only after the grantee has been
convicted by final judgment in the instances enumerated in
the majority ponencia. This is crystal clear from the terms of
Sec. 19, Art.. VII, 1987
594
594 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
People vs. Salle, Jr.
Constitution, which states that [e]xcept in cases of
impeachment, or as otherwise provided in this Constitution,
the President may grant reprieves, commutations, and
pardons, and remit fines and forfeitures, after conviction by
final judgment x x x x as distinguished from its counterpart
provision in the 1973 Constitution, as amended, under
which People v. Crisola
1
and Monsanto v. Factoran, Jr.
2
were decided. Accordingly, any grant of pardon in favor of
an appellant whose appeal is still pending resolution
violates the Constitution.
Thus where an appeal is taken from a judgment of
conviction, the appellant must first withdraw his appeal or
await the resolution thereof so that the judgment on appeal
may attain finality. If his appeal is not yet resolved with
finality, the appellant must first withdraw his appeal before
his application for reprieve, commutation, pardon, remission
of fines or forfeitures may be acted upon favorably by the
Board of Pardons and Parole and, for that matter, by the
Presidential Committee for the Grant of Bail, Release or
Pardon. Consequently, such application should not be
processed until the applicant sufficiently shows that the
decision finding him guilty has become final.
To allow the processing of such application in the case
before us despite the pendency of an appeal may lead to
confusion since the applicant may yet be acquitted by the
appellate court although already granted pardon by the
President. That would be incongruous and unwarranted.
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Hence, the present practice of the Board of Pardons and
Parole, which may be an unjustified carry-over from the
past under the old Constitution, and of the Presidential
Committee for the Grant of Bail, Release or Pardon, of
processing applications for reprieves, pardons,
commutations, etc., despite the pendency of an appeal must
immediately be abated.
The persistent recurrence of the grant of such
applications despite repeated admonitions from this Court
demands a firm and uncompromising stand from us lest we
permit continuous and unmitigated diminution if not
derogation of judicial preroga-
______________
1 No. L-32422, 2 March 1984, 128 SCRA 1.
2 G.R. No. 78239, 9 February 1989, 170 SCRA 190.
595
VOL. 250, DECEMBER 4, 1995 595
People vs. Salle, Jr.
tive. A mere deferment or suspension of the effectivity of the
conditional pardon until the withdrawal of the appeal, to my
mind, is a sanction too lenient, or an accommodation too
generous, that can hardly be considered a corrective
measure. The manifest and repeated violation of the
Constitution, wittingly or unwittingly, necessitates a
commensurable response from this Court as guardian of the
Constitution.
Accused-appellant Ricky Mengote y Cuntado required to
secure withdrawal of his appeal and submit it to Court
within 30 days. The conditional pardon of said appellant to
take effect only upon grant of such withdrawal.
Notes.The very essence of a pardon is forgiveness or
remission of guilt and not forgetfulness. It does not erase the
fact of the commission of the crime and the conviction
thereof. Pardon frees the individual from all the penalties
and legal disabilities and restores to him all his civil rights.
Unless expressly grounded on the persons innocence, it
cannot bring back lost reputation for honesty, integrity and
fair dealing. (Monsanto vs. Factoran, Jr., 170 SCRA 190
[1989])
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If the pardon is based on the innocence of the individual,
it affirms this innocence and makes him a new man and as
innocent as if he had not been found guilty of the offense
charged. When a person is given pardon because he did not
truly commit the offense, the pardon relieves the party from
all punitive consequences of his criminal act, thereby
restoring to him his clean name, good reputation and
unstained character prior to the finding of guilt. (Garcia vs.
Chairman, Commission on Audit, 226 SCRA 356 [1993])
o0o
596
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