DIGEST Lacson v. Exec Sec
DIGEST Lacson v. Exec Sec
DIGEST Lacson v. Exec Sec
Executive Secretary
G.R. No. 128096
January 20, 1999
J. Martinez
Chas
Panfilo
M.
Lacson,
Romeo
Acop
and
Franciscio
Zubia
(intervenors)
petitioners
responden The Executive Secretary, The Sandiganbayan, Office of the Special Prosecutor, The DoJ,
ts Myrna Abalora, Nenita Alap-ap, Imelda Montero, and the People of the Philippines
summary Petitioners accused of murdering Kuratong Baleleng gang members. Case filed with the
SB but transferred to RTC since none of the principal accused had SG of 27. However,
RA8249 was passed which deleted principal so the SB retained jurisdiction. Petitioner
and intervenors now assail the constitutionality of RA8249 on the ground that secs. 4
and 7 violated their DP and EPC (among other arguments).
SC ruled that the provisions were constitutional. In particular, the offense involved fell
under Sec. 4 (b) of RA8249 (Other offenses or felonies whether simple or complexed
with other crimes committed by the public officials and employees mentioned in
Subsection A of this section in relation to their office). However, because the amended
informations did not contain specific factual averments that show that the charge of
murder was intimately connected with the discharge of official functions of the
accused, the offense charged in the subject criminal cases is plain murder and,
therefore, within the exclusive original jurisdiction of the Regional Trial Court, not the
SB.
Cases assailing SB jurisdiction: The accused filed separate motions questioning the
jurisdiction of the SB. They asserted that under the amended informations, the cases fall within
the jurisdiction of the RTC to Section 2 of R.A. 7975. They contend that the said law limited the
jurisdiction of the Sandiganbayan to cases where one or more of the principal accused are
government officals with Salary Grade 27 or higher, or PNP officials with rank of Chief
Superintendent or higher. Thus, they did not qualify under said requisites. >>> SB agreed and
ordered the cases to be transferred to RTC QC since none of the PRINCIPAL accused has a high
enough rank.
1
However, pending their motions, RA82491 was passed, which amended jurisdiction of
SB This law amended the jurisdiction of the Sandiganbayan by deleting the word principal
from the phrase principal accused in Section 2 of R.A. 7975. >>> Because of such
amendment, the SB reversed its order transferring the case to the RTC. It ruled that Considering
that three of the accused in each of these cases are PNP Chief Superintendents: namely, Jewel T.
Canson, Romeo M. Acop and Panfilo M. Lacson, and that trial has not yet begun in all these cases
in fact, no order of arrest has been issued this court has competence to take cognizance of these
cases.
Current petitions questioning constitutionality of RA8249 Specifically, they assail Secs.
4 and 7 which provide that the said law shall apply to all cases pending in any court over which
trial has not begun as of the approval hereof.
ARGUMENTS:
a) The questioned provision of the statute were introduced by the authors thereof in bad faith as it was
made to precisely suit the situation in which petitioners cases were in at the Sandiganbayan by restoring
jurisdiction thereover to it, thereby violating his right to procedural due process and the equal protection
clause of the Constitution. Further, from the way the Sandiganbayan has foot-dragged for nine (9) months
the resolution of a pending incident involving the transfer of the cases to the Regional Trial Court, the
passage of the law may have been timed to overtake such resolution to render the issue therein moot, and
frustrate the exercise of petitioners vested rights under the old Sandiganbayan law (RA 7975).
b) Retroactive application of the law is plain from the fact that it was again made to suit the peculiar
circumstances in which petitioners cases were under, namely, that trial had not yet commenced, as
provided in Section 7, to make certain that those cases will no longer be remanded to the Quezon City
Regional Trial Court, as the Sandiganbayan alone should try them, thus making it an ex post facto
legislation and a denial of the right of petitioner as an accused to procedural DP.
issue
WoN the provisions violate the petitioners right to DP and the equal protection clause of the
Constitution as the provisions seemed to have been introduced for the Sandiganbayan to
continue to acquire jurisdiction over the Kuratong Baleleng case. NO.
WoN the provisions may be considered an ex-post facto law. NO
WoN the amended Informations were sufficient to constitute offenses under the SBs jurisdiction.
NO.
ratio
1) Every law has in its favor the presumption of constitutionality, and to justify its
nullification there must be a clear and unequivocal breach of the Constitution, not a
doubtful and argumentative one.
Pertinent portions of the subject provisions:
SEC. 4 Jurisdiction - The Sandiganbayan shall exercise exclusive original jurisdiction in all
cases involving:
a. Violations of Republic Act No. 3019, as amended, otherwise known as the Anti-Graft and
Corrupt Practices Act, Republic Act No. 1379, and Chapter II, Section 2, Title VII, Book II of
the Revised Penal Code, where one or more of the accused are officials occupying
It is an established precept in constitutional law that the guaranty of the equal protection of the laws is not violated by
a legislation based on reasonable classification. The classification is reasonable and not arbitrary when there is
concurrence of four elements, namely:
(1) it must rest on substantial distinction;
(2) it must be germane to the purpose of the law;
(3) must not be limited to existing conditions only, and
(4) must apply equally to all members of the same class
APPLIED: All are present in this case. The classification between those pending cases involving
the concerned public officials whose trial has not yet commenced and whose cases could have
been affected by the amendments of the Sandiganbayan jurisdiction under R.A. 8249, as against
those cases where trial had already started as of the approval of the law, rests on substantial
distinction that makes real differences.
How? >> In the first instance, evidence against them were not yet presented, whereas in the
latter the parties had already submitted their respective proofs, examined witness and presented
documents.
3) ARGUMENT: SB judges were in bad faith (some of the judges helped in passing of
RA8249 and were biased during the trial).
SC: No basis. First, the fact that some of the judges helped in passing the law is of no moment.
The legislature is empowered by the Consti to invite persons to appear before it whenever it
decides to conduct inquiries in aid of legislation. Second, the contention that the law was passed
specifically for their case does not overthrow the presumption of regularity. The lawwas acted,
deliberated, considered by 23 other Senators and by about 250 Representatives, and was
separately approved by the Senate and House of Representatives and, finally, by the President of
the Philippines.
4) ARGUMENT: RA8249 secs. 4 and 7 are ex post facto laws.
SC: An ex post facto law, generally, provides retroactive effect of penal laws. R.A. 8249 is not a
penal law, as it is a substantive law on jurisdiction which is not penal in character. R.A. 7975, as
regards the Sandiganbayans jurisdiction, its mode of appeal and other procedural matters is
clearly a procedural statute, one which prescribes rules of procedure by which courts applying
laws of all kinds can properly administer justice. Not being a penal law, the retroactive
application of R.A. 8249 cannot be challenged as unconstitutional.
5) ARGUMENT: Violation of one-title-one-subject rule of the Consti. Title only states that law
defines the SBs jurisdiction but in reality also expanded such.
SC: Nope. Subjects related to the general purpose which the statute seeks to achieve are allowed to be
included. Here, the expansion of jurisdiction does not have to be expressly stated in the title because such
is the necessary consequence of the amendments.
6) Now that the Law was deemed constitutional, the SC looked at the allegations in
the Informations to determine whether the RTC or the SB had jurisdiction.
As stated earlier, the multiple murder charge against petitioner and intervenors falls under
Section 4 [paragraph b] of R.A. 8249. Section 4 requires that the offense charged must be
committed by the offender in relation to his office in order for the Sandiganbayan to have
jurisdiction over it.
When is an offense in relation to ones office? >>> When the offense is intimately
connected with the office of the offender and perpetrated while he was in the performance of his
official functions. (People v. Montejo)
So was the offense related to their offices? >>> NOPE. The allegations in the Informations
did not contain specific factual averments to show the intimate relation between the offense
charged and the discharge of official function of the offenders.
First, the SC discussed the rule on how the offense charged must be stated in an
Information. Rule 110, Sec. 9 of the RoC mandates that the Information must contain the facts
sufficient enough to enable a person of common understanding to know what offense is intended
to be charged.
In this case, the informations contained no specific allegation of facts that the shooting
of the victim by the said principal accused was intimately related to the discharge of their
official duties as police officers. Likewise, the amended information does not indicate that the
said accused arrested and investigated the victim and then killed the latter while in their custody.
7) THEREFORE, since allegations in the amended informations not sufficient enough to
constitute an offense under the SBs jurisdiction, the case should be transferred to
the RTC.
It is an elementary rule that jurisdiction is determined by the allegations in the complaint
or information and not by the result of evidence after trial.
Consequently, for failure to show in the amended informations that the charge of murder
was intimately connected with the discharge of official functions of the accused PNP officers, the
offense charged in the subject criminal cases is plain murder and, therefore, within the exclusive
original jurisdiction of the Regional Trial Court.