Violeta Bahilidad Vs People of The Philippines
Violeta Bahilidad Vs People of The Philippines
Violeta Bahilidad Vs People of The Philippines
PEOPLE V. LUCAS
Thus, consistent with the rule mentioned, the Supreme Court, by
its First Division, applied Article 65 of the Code in imposing the
penalty for rape in People v. Conrado Lucas, GR No. 10817273,May 25, 1994. It divided the time included in the penalty of
reclusion perpetua into three equal portions composing a period
as follows:
Minimum20 years and one day to 26 years and eight months;
Medium26 years, eight months and one day to 33 years and four
months;
Maximum34 years, four months and one day to 40 years.
Considering the aggravating circumstance of relationship, the
Court sentenced the accused to imprisonment of 34 years, four
months and one day of reclusion perpetua, instead of the straight
penalty of reclusion perpetua imposed by the trial court. The
appellee seasonably filed a motion for clarification to correct the
duration of the sentence, because instead of beginning with 33
years, four months and one day, it began with 34 years, four
months and one day. The issue of whether the amendment of
Article 27 made reclusion perpetua a divisible penalty was raised,
and because the issue is one of first impression and momentous
importance, the First Division referred the motion to the Court en
banc.
In a resolution promulgated on January 5, 1995, the Supreme
Court en banc held that reclusion perpetua shall remain as an
indivisible penalty. To this end, the resolution states:
SC:
Article 319 of the Revised Penal Code, under the title "Chattel
Mortgage",
"ART. 319. Removal, sale or pledge of mortgaged property. The
penalty of arresto mayor or a fine amounting to twice the value
of the property shall be imposed
The value of the property mortgaged in this case is P320. Double
that amount would be P640. Under Article 319, above
reproduced, the penalty for the offense is arresto mayor or a fine
double the value of the property involved. In other words, the fine
is an alternative penalty. The question now to determine is,
when does an offense penalized with an alternative penalty of a
fine of P640 prescribe?
PEOPLE V. BASALO
The Government, through the Provincial Fiscal of Bataan, is
appealing the order of the trial court of August 30, 1955,
dismissing the case against the defendant-appellee Francisco
Basalo for alleged violation of Article 319 of the Revised Penal
Code, on the ground of prescription.
Francisco Basalo sold eighty cavans of palay, he had mortgaged to
the Philippine National Bank, without the knowledge and consent
of the mortgagee, to the damage and prejudice of the said bank in
the sum of at least P280. Upon arraignment, the accused
interposed the defense of prescription on the ground that more
than five years had elapsed from the time the offense was
The Solicitor General in his brief disagrees with this ruling of the
lower court and contends that said ruling was erroneous. He cites
Article 26 of the Revised Penal Code, which reads:
PEOPLE V. CRISOSTOMO
September 3, 1959: Jesus L. Crisostomo was charged before the
Court of First Instance of Bulacan, with the crime of estafa.
September, 1945 : Sold by way of absolute sale a parcel of land
containing an area of three (3) hectares to the spouses Teodoro
Faustino and Regina Pangan for P15,000.00, by executing a public
instrument duly recorded with the Register of Deeds.
Stating in the said deed of sale that the said property was free
from all liens and encumbrances of whatever nature, knowing that
said statement was false, as the property was (already) previously
encumbered by way of mortgage, to one Antonio Villarama, said
mortgage still valid and subsisting at the time of the sale
aforementioned, and which fact came to the knowledge of the said
spouses only in 1953, thereby defrauding and damaging said
spouses in the sum of P15,000.00.
Defense:
Moved to quash the information on the ground that the offense
had already prescribed; offense charged prescribes in 5 years, it
being punishable with arresto mayor (Art. 90, paragraph 3,
Revised Penal Code).
Prosecution:
The offense charged prescribes in 15 years because aside from the
penalty of arresto mayor, the law imposes a fine of not less than
the value of the damage caused and not more than three times
such value, which in this case would be a minimum of
P15,000.00.
SC:
In the instant case the offense charged is also punishable with a
fine which is afflictive in nature (Article 26, Revise Penal Code),
but such fine is not imposed either as a single as an alternative
penalty, but is imposed in conjunction with arresto mayor in
its minimum and medium periods. For the reason, the court is of
the opinion that the afflictive fine imposable should not be
taken as the basis for computing the prescriptive period,
Article 90, which provides that, "When the penalty fixed by law is
a compound one, the highest penalty shall be made the basis of
the application of the rules contained in the first, second and third
paragraphs of this article" (See also Peo. vs. Rufo Cruz, G.R. No. L15132, May 25, 1960). Under the facts alleged in the present
information, the fine is a higher penalty than arresto mayor,