PLDT V Alvarez
PLDT V Alvarez
PLDT V Alvarez
The CA rulings (i) quashed the first two search warrants, similarly docketed as
Search Warrant No. 03–063, issued for violation of Article 308, in relation to Article
309, of the Revised Penal Code (RPC), and (ii) declared void paragraphs 7, 8 and
9 of the other two search warrants, also similarly docketed as Search Warrant No.
03–064, issued for violation of Presidential Decree (PD) No. 401.4
FACTUAL ANTECEDENTS
18. During the site inspection [at No. 38 Indonesia St., Better Living Subdivision],
we noticed that the protector of each telephone line/number xxx were enclosed in
a fabricated wooden cabinet with safety padlock. Said wooden cabinet was
situated on the concrete wall inside the compound near the garage entrance gate.
The telephone inside the wiring installations from the protector to the connecting
blocks were placed in a plastic electrical conduit routed to the adjacent room at the
second floor.17
On December 3, 2003, Police Superintendent Gilbert C. Cruz filed a consolidated
application for a search warrant18 before Judge Francisco G. Mendiola of the
RTC, for the crimes of theft and violation of PD No. 401. According to PLDT, the
respondents are engaged in a form of network fraud known as International Simple
Resale (ISR) which amounts to theft under the RPC.
ISR is a method of routing and completing international long distance calls using
lines, cables, antennae and/or wave frequencies which are connected directly to
the domestic exchange facilities of the country where the call is destined
(terminating country); and, in the process, bypassing the IGF at the terminating
country.19
Judge Mendiola found probable cause for the issuance of the search warrants
applied for. Accordingly, four search warrants20 were issued for violations of
Article 308, in relation to Article 309, of the RPC (SW A–1 and SW A–2) and of PD
No. 401, as amended (SW B–1 and SW B–2) for the ISR activities being conducted
at 17 Dominic Savio St., Savio Compound and at No. 38 Indonesia St., Better
Living Subdivision, both in Barangay Don Bosco, Paranaque City. The four search
warrants enumerated the objects to be searched and seized as follows:
1. MERIDIAN SUBSCRIBERS UNIT AND PLDT DSL LINES and/or CABLES
AND ANTENNAS and/or similar equipment or device capable of transmitting
air waves or frequency, such as a Meridian Subscriber’s Unit, Broadband
DSL and telephone lines;
2. PERSONAL COMPUTERS or any similar equipment or device capable of
accepting information applying the prescribed process of the information and
supplying the result of this process;
3. NOKIA MODEM or any similar equipment or device that enables data
terminal equipment such as computers to communicate with other data
terminal equipment via a telephone line;
4. QUINTUM Equipment or any similar equipment capable of receiving digital
signals from the internet and converting those signals to voice;
5. QUINTUM, 3COM AND CISCO Routers or any similar equipment capable of
switching packets of data to their assigned destination or addresses;
6. LINKS DSL SWITCH or any similar equipment capable of switching data;
7. COMPUTER PRINTERS AND SCANNERS or any similar equipment or
device used for copying and/or printing data and/or information;
8. SOFTWARE, DISKETTES, TAPES or any similar equipment or device used
for recording or storing information; and
9. Manuals, phone cards, access codes, billing statements, receipts, contracts,
checks, orders, communications and documents, lease and/or subscription
agreements or contracts, communications and documents relating to
securing and using telephone lines and/or equipment[.]21
On the same date, the PNP searched the premises indicated in the warrants. On
December 10, 2003, a return was made with a complete inventory of the items
seized.22 On January 14, 2004, the PLDT and the PNP filed with the Department
of Justice a joint complaint–affidavit for theft and for violation of PD No. 401 against
the respondents.23
On February 18, 2004, the respondents filed with the RTC a motion to quash24 the
search warrants essentially on the following grounds: first, the RTC had no
authority to issue search warrants which were enforced in Parañaque City; second,
the enumeration of the items to be searched and seized lacked particularity;
and third, there was no probable cause for the crime of theft.
On March 12, 2004, PLDT opposed the respondents' motion.25
In a July 6, 2004 order,26 the RTC denied the respondents' motion to quash.
Having been rebuffed27 in their motion for reconsideration,28 the respondents
filed a petition for certiorari with the CA.” 29
RULING OF THE CA
On August 11, 2006, the CA rendered the assailed decision and resolution,
granting the respondents' petition for certiorari. The CA quashed SW A–l and SW
A–2 (for theft) on the ground that they were issued for “non–existent
crimes.” 30 According to the CA, inherent in the determination of probable cause
for the issuance of search warrant is the accompanying determination that an
offense has been committed. Relying on this Court’s decision in Laurel v. Judge
Abrogar,31 the CA ruled that the respondents could not have possibly committed
the crime of theft because PLDT’s business of providing telecommunication
services and these services themselves are not personal properties contemplated
under Article 308 of the RPC.
With respect to SW B–l and SW B–2 (for violation of PD No. 401), the CA upheld
paragraphs one to six of the enumeration of items subject of the search. The CA
held that the stock phrase “or similar equipment or device” found in paragraphs
one to six of the search warrants did not make it suffer from generality since each
paragraph’s enumeration of items was sufficiently qualified by the citation of the
specific objects to be seized and by its functions which are inherently connected
with the crime allegedly committed.
The CA, however, nullified the ensuing paragraphs, 7, 8 and 9, for lack of
particularity and ordered the return of the items seized under these provisions.
While the same stock phrase appears in paragraphs 7 and 8, the properties
described therein – i.e., printer and scanner, software, diskette and tapes – include
even those for the respondents' personal use, making the description of the things
to be seized too general in nature.
With the denial of its motion for reconsideration,32 PLDT went to this Court via this
Rule 45 petition.
THE PETITIONER'S ARGUMENTS
PLDT faults the CA for relying on Laurel on three grounds: first, Laurel cannot be
cited yet as an authority under the principle of stare decisis because Laurel is not
yet final and executory; in fact, it is the subject of a pending motion for
reconsideration filed by PLDT itself; second, even assuming that Laurel is already
final, the facts in Laurel vary from the present case. Laurel involves the quashal of
an information on the ground that the information does not charge any offense;
hence, the determination of the existence of the elements of the crime of theft is
indispensable in resolving the motion to quash. In contrast, the present case
involves the quashal of a search warrant. Third, accordingly, in resolving the
motion, the issuing court only has to be convinced that there is probable cause to
hold that: (i) the items to be seized are connected to a criminal activity; and (ii)
these items are found in the place to be searched. Since the matter of quashing a
search warrant may be rooted on matters “extrinsic of the search warrant,” 33 the
issuing court does not need to look into the elements of the crime allegedly
committed in the same manner that the CA did in Laurel.
PLDT adds that a finding of grave abuse of discretion in the issuance of search
warrant may be justified only when there is “disregard of the requirements for the
issuance of a search warrant[.]” 34 In the present case, the CA did not find (and
could not have found) any grave abuse of discretion on the part of the RTC
because at the time the RTC issued the search warrants in 2003, Laurel had not
yet been promulgated.
In defending the validity of the nullified provisions of SW B–l and SW B–2, PLDT
argues that PD No. 401 also punishes unauthorized installation of telephone
connections. Since the enumerated items are connected to the computers that are
illegally connected to PLDT telephone lines, then these items bear a direct relation
to the offense of violation of PD No. 401, justifying their seizure.
The enumeration in paragraph 8 is likewise a proper subject of seizure because
they are the fruits of the offense as they contain information on PLDT’s business
profit and other information relating to the commission of violation of PD No. 401.
Similarly, paragraph 9 specifies the fruits and evidence of violation of PD No. 401
since it supports PLDT’s claim that the respondents have made a business out of
their illegal connections to PLDT lines.
THE RESPONDENTS' ARGUMENTS
The respondents counter that while Laurel may not yet be final, at least it has a
persuasive effect as the current jurisprudence on the matter. Even without Laurel,
the CA’s nullification of SW A–l and SW A–2 can withstand scrutiny because of the
novelty of the issue presented before it. The nullification of paragraphs 7, 8 and 9
of SW B–l and SW B–2 must be upheld not only on the ground of broadness but
for lack of any relation whatsoever with PD No. 401 which punishes the theft of
electricity.
OUR RULING
xxx. Business, like services in business, although are properties, are not proper
subjects of theft under the Revised Penal Code because the same cannot be
“taken” or “occupied.” If it were otherwise, xxx there would be no juridical difference
between the taking of the business of a person or the services provided by him for
gain, vis–a–vis, the taking of goods, wares or merchandise, or equipment
comprising his business. If it was its intention to include “business” as personal
property under Article 308 of the Revised Penal Code, the Philippine Legislature
should have spoken in language that is clear and definite: that business is personal
property under Article 308 of the Revised Penal Code.
xxxx
The petitioner is not charged, under the Amended Information, for theft of
telecommunication or telephone services offered by PLDT. Even if he is, the term
“personal property” under Article 308 of the Revised Penal Code cannot be
interpreted beyond its seams so as to include “telecommunication or telephone
services” or computer services for that matter. xxx. Even at common law, neither
time nor services may be taken and occupied or appropriated. A service is
generally not considered property and a theft of service would not, therefore,
constitute theft since there can be no caption or asportation. Neither is the
unauthorized use of the equipment and facilities of PLDT by [Laurel] theft under
[Article 308].
If it was the intent of the Philippine Legislature, in 1930, to include services to be
the subject of theft, it should have incorporated the same in Article 308 of the
Revised Penal Code. The Legislature did not. In fact, the Revised Penal Code
does not even contain a definition of services.37
PLDT38 moved for reconsideration and referral of the case to the Court En Banc.
The Court’s First Division granted the referral.
On January 13, 2009 (or while the present petition was pending in court), the
Court En Bancunanimously granted PLDT’s motion for reconsideration. 39 The
Court ruled that even prior to the passage of the RPC, jurisprudence is settled that
“any personal property, tangible or intangible, corporeal or incorporeal, capable of
appropriation can be the object of theft.” 40 This jurisprudence, in turn, applied the
prevailing legal meaning of the term “personal property” under the old Civil Code
as “anything susceptible of appropriation and not included in the foregoing chapter
(not real property).” 41 PLDT’s telephone service or its business of providing this
was appropriable personal property and was, in fact, the subject of appropriation
in an ISR operation, facilitated by means of the unlawful use of PLDT’s facilities.
Indeed, while it may be conceded that “international long distance calls,” the matter
alleged to be stolen xxx, take the form of electrical energy, it cannot be said that
such international long distance calls were personal properties belonging to PLDT
since the latter could not have acquired ownership over such calls. PLDT merely
encodes, augments, enhances, decodes and transmits said calls using its complex
communications infrastructure and facilities. PLDT not being the owner of said
telephone calls, then it could not validly claim that such telephone calls were taken
without its consent. It is the use of these communications facilities without the
consent of PLDT that constitutes the crime of theft, which is the unlawful taking of
the telephone services and business.
Therefore, the business of providing telecommunication and the telephone service
are personal property under Article 308 of the Revised Penal Code, and the act of
engaging in ISR is an act of “subtraction” penalized under said article.42
The Court En Banc’s reversal of its Laurel Division ruling during the pendency of
this petition significantly impacts on how the Court should resolve the present case
for two reasons:
First, the Laurel En Banc ruling categorically equated an ISR activity to theft under
the RPC. In so doing, whatever alleged factual variance there may be
between Laurel and the present case cannot render Laurel inapplicable.
Second, and more importantly, in a Rule 45 petition, the Court basically determines
whether the CA was legally correct in determining whether the RTC committed
grave abuse of discretion. Under this premise, the CA ordinarily gauges the grave
abuse of discretion at the time the RTC rendered its assailed resolution. In
quashing SW A–l and SW A–2, note that the CA relied on the Laurel Division ruling
at the time when it was still subject of a pending motion for reconsideration. The
CA, in fact, did not expressly impute grave abuse of discretion on the RTC when
the RTC issued the search warrants and later refused to quash these.
Understandably, the CA could not have really found the presence of grave abuse
of discretion for there was no Laurel ruling to speak of at the time the RTC issued
the search warrants.
These peculiar facts require us to more carefully analyze our prism of review under
Rule 45.
Requisites for the issuance of search warrant; probable cause requires the
probable existence of an offense
Section 2, Article III of the 1987 Constitution guarantees the right of persons to be
free from unreasonable searches and seizures.
Section 2. The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers,
and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures of whatever nature and
for any purpose shall be inviolable, and no search warrant or warrant of arrest shall
issue except upon probable cause to be determined personally by the judge after
examination under oath or affirmation of the complainant and the witnesses he
may produce, and particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons
or things to be seized.
The purposes of the constitutional provision against unlawful searches and
seizures are to: (i) prevent the officers of the law from violating private security in
person and property and illegally invading the sanctity of the home; and (ii) give
remedy against such usurpations when attempted or committed.43
The constitutional requirement for the issuance of a search warrant is reiterated
under Sections 4 and 5, Rule 126 of the Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure.
These sections lay down the following requirements for the issuance of a search
warrant: (1) the existence of probable cause; (2) the probable cause must be
determined personally by the judge; (3) the judge must examine, in writing and
under oath or affirmation, the complainant and the witnesses he or she may
produce; (4) the applicant and the witnesses testify on the facts personally known
to them; and (5) the warrant specifically describes the place to be searched and
the things to be seized.44 Should any of these requisites be absent, the party
aggrieved by the issuance and enforcement of the search warrant may file a
motion to quash the search warrant with the issuing court or with the court where
the action is subsequently instituted.45
A search warrant proceeding is a special criminal and judicial process akin to a
writ of discovery. It is designed by the Rules of Criminal Procedure to respond only
to an incident in the main case, if one has already been instituted, or in anticipation
thereof. Since it is at most incidental to the main criminal case, an order granting
or denying a motion to quash a search warrant may be questioned only via a
petition for certiorari under Rule 65.46
When confronted with this petition, the higher court must necessarily determine
the validity of the lower court’s action from the prism of whether it was tainted with
grave abuse of discretion. By grave abuse of discretion, jurisprudence refers to the
capricious and whimsical exercise of judgment equivalent to lack of jurisdiction, or
to the exercise of power in an arbitrary or despotic manner by reason of passion
or personal hostility or in a manner so patent and gross as to amount to an invasion
of positive duty or to the virtual refusal to perform the duty enjoined or to act at all
in contemplation of the law.47
In a certiorari proceeding, the determination translates to an inquiry on whether the
requirements and limitations provided under the Constitution and the Rules of
Court were properly complied with, from the issuance of the warrant up to its
implementation. In view of the constitutional objective of preventing stealthy
encroachment upon or the gradual depreciation of the rights secured by the
Constitution, strict compliance with the constitutional and procedural requirements
is required. A judge who issues a search warrant without complying with these
requirements commits grave abuse of discretion.48
One of the constitutional requirements for the validity of a search warrant is that it
must be issued based on probable cause which, under the Rules, must be in
connection with one specific offense. In search warrant proceedings, probable
cause is defined as such facts and circumstances that would lead a reasonably
discreet and prudent man to believe that an offense has been committed and that
the objects sought in connection with the offense are in the place sought to be
searched.49
In the determination of probable cause, the court must necessarily determine
whether an offense exists to justify the issuance or quashal of the search
warrant50 because the personal properties that may be subject of the search
warrant are very much intertwined with the “one specific offense” requirement of
probable cause.51 Contrary to PLDT’s claim, the only way to determine whether a
warrant should issue in connection with one specific offense is to juxtapose the
facts and circumstances presented by the applicant with the elements of the
offense that are alleged to support the search warrant.
Reviewing the RTC’s denial of the motion to quash SWA–l and SW A–2
a. From the prism of Rule 65
The facts of the present case easily call to mind the case of Columbia Pictures,
Inc. v. CA52 involving copyright infringement. In that case, the CA likewise voided
the search warrant issued by the trial court by applying a doctrine that added a
new requirement (i.e., the production of the master tape for comparison with the
allegedly pirate copies) in determining the existence of probable cause for the
issuance of search warrant in copyright infringement cases. The doctrine referred
to was laid down in 20th Century Fox Film Corporation v. Court of Appeals.
20th Century Fox, however, was promulgated more than eight months after the
search warrants were issued by the RTC. In reversing the CA, the Court ruled:
Mindful as we are of the ramifications of the doctrine of stare decisis and the
rudiments of fair play, it is our considered view that the 20th Century Fox ruling
cannot be retroactively applied to the instant case to justify the quashal of Search
Warrant No. 87–053. [The] petitioners' consistent position that the order of the
lower court[,] xxx [which denied the respondents'] motion to lift the order of search
warrant^] was properly issued, [because there was] satisfactory compliance with
the then prevailing standards under the law for determination of probable cause,
is indeed well taken. The lower court could not possibly have expected more
evidence from petitioners in their application for a search warrant other than what
the law and jurisprudence, then existing and judicially accepted, required with
respect to the finding of probable cause.53
Columbia could easily be cited in favor of PLDT to sustain the RTC’s refusal to
quash the search warrant. Indeed, in quashing SW A–l and SW A–2, the CA never
intimated that the RTC disregarded any of the requisites for the issuance of a
search warrant as these requirements were interpreted and observed under
the then prevailing jurisprudence. The CA could not have done so because
precisely the issue of whether telephone services or the business of providing
these services could be the subject of theft under the RPC had not yet reached the
Court when the search warrants were applied for and issued.
However, what distinguishes Columbia from the present case is the focus
of Columbia’s legal rationale. Columbia’s focus was not on whether the facts and
circumstances would reasonably lead to the conclusion that an offense has been
or is being committed and that the objects sought in connection with the offense
were in the place to be searched – the primary points of focus of the present
case. Columbia’s focus was on whether the evidence presented at the time the
search warrant was applied for was sufficient to establish the facts and
circumstances required for establishing probable cause to issue a search warrant.
Nonetheless, Columbia serves as a neat guide for the CA to decide the
respondents' certiorari petition. In Columbia, the Court applied the principle of
non–retroactivity of its ruling in 20th Century Fox, whose finality was not an issue,
in reversing a CA ruling. The Court’s attitude in that case should have been
adopted by the CA in the present case a fortiori since the ruling that the CA relied
upon was not yet final at the time the CA resolved to quash the search warrants.
b. Supervening events justifying a broader review under Rule 65
Ordinarily, the CA’s determination under Rule 65 is limited to whether the RTC
gravely abused its discretion in granting or denying the motion to quash based on
facts then existing. Nonetheless, the Court recognizes that supervening facts may
transpire after the issuance and implementation of the search warrant that may
provide justification for the quashal of the search warrant via a petition
for certiorari.
For one, if the offense for which the warrant is issued is subsequently
decriminalized during the pendency of the petition for certiorari, then the warrant
may be quashed.54 For another, a subsequent ruling from the Court that a similar
set of facts and circumstances does not constitute an offense, as alleged in the
search warrant application, may be used as a ground to quash a warrant.55 In
both instances, the underlying reason for quashing the search warrant is the
absence of probable cause which can only possibly exist when the combination of
facts and circumstances points to the possible commission of an offense that may
be evidenced by the personal properties sought to be seized. To the CA, the
second instance mentioned justified the quashal of the search warrants.
We would have readily agreed with the CA if the Laurel Division ruling had not
been subsequently reversed. As things turned out, however, the Court granted
PLDT’s motion for reconsideration of the Court First Division’s ruling in Laurel and
ruled that “the act of engaging in ISR is xxx penalized under xxx article [308 of the
RPC].” 56 As the RTC itself found, PLDT successfully established in its application
for a search warrant a probable cause for theft by evidence that Laurel’s ISR
activities deprived PLDT of its telephone services and of its business of providing
these services without its consent.
b1. the stare decisis aspect
With the Court En Banc’s reversal of the earlier Laurel ruling, then the CA’s
quashal of these warrants would have no leg to stand on. This is the dire
consequence of failing to appreciate the full import of the doctrine of stare decisis
that the CA ignored.
Under Article 8 of the Civil Code, the decisions of this Court form part of the
country’s legal system. While these decisions are not laws pursuant to the doctrine
of separation of powers, they evidence the laws' meaning, breadth, and scope and,
therefore, have the same binding force as the laws themselves.57Hence, the
Court’s interpretation of a statute forms part of the law as of the date it was
originally passed because the Court’s construction merely establishes the
contemporaneous legislative intent that the interpreted law carries into effect.58
Article 8 of the Civil Code embodies the basic principle of stare decisis et non
quieta movere (to adhere to precedents and not to unsettle established matters)
that enjoins adherence to judicial precedents embodied in the decision of the
Supreme Court. That decision becomes a judicial precedent to be followed in
subsequent cases by all courts in the land. The doctrine of stare decisis, in turn, is
based on the principle that once a question of law has been examined and decided,
it should be deemed settled and closed to further argument.59 The doctrine of
(horizontal) stare decisis is one of policy, grounded on the necessity of securing
certainty and stability of judicial decisions.60
In the field of adjudication, a case cannot yet acquire the status of a “decided” case
that is “deemed settled and closed to further argument” if the Court’s decision is
still the subject of a motion for reconsideration seasonably filed by the moving
party. Under the Rules of Court, a party is expressly allowed to file a motion for
reconsideration of the Court’s decision within 15 days from notice.61 Since the
doctrine of stare decisis is founded on the necessity of securing certainty and
stability in law, then these attributes will spring only once the Court’s ruling has
lapsed to finality in accordance with law. In Ting v. Velez–Ting,62 we ruled that:
The principle of stare decisis enjoins adherence by lower courts to doctrinal rules
established by this Court in its final decisions. It is based on the principle that once
a question of law has been examined and decided, it should be deemed settled
and closed to further argument.
In applying Laurel despite PLDT’s statement that the case is still subject of a
pending motion for reconsideration,63 the CA legally erred in refusing to
reconsider its ruling that largely relied on a non–fmal ruling of the Court. While the
CA’s dutiful desire to apply the latest pronouncement of the Court in Laurel is
expected, it should have acted with caution, instead of excitement, on being
informed by PLDT of its pending motion for reconsideration; it should have then
followed the principle of stare decisis. The appellate court’s application of an
exceptional circumstance when it may order the quashal of the search warrant on
grounds not existing at the time the warrant was issued or implemented must still
rest on prudential grounds if only to maintain the limitation of the scope of the
remedy of certiorari as a writ to correct errors of jurisdiction and not mere errors of
judgment.
Still, the respondents attempt to justify the CA’s action by arguing that the CA
would still rule in the way it did64 even without Laurel. As PLDT correctly pointed
out, there is simply nothing in the CA’s decision that would support its quashal of
the search warrant independently of Laurel. We must bear in mind that the CA’s
quashal of SW A–l and SW A–2 operated under the strictures of
a certiorari petition, where the presence of grave abuse of discretion is necessary
for the corrective writ to issue since the appellate court exercises its supervisory
jurisdiction in this case. We simply cannot second–guess what the CA’s action
could have been.
Lastly, the CA’s reliance on Savage v. Judge Taypin65 can neither sustain the
quashal of SW A–l and SW A–2. In Savage, the Court granted
the certiorari petition and quashed the search warrant because the alleged crime
(unfair competition involving design patents) that supported the search warrant had
already been repealed, and the act complained of, if at all, gave rise only to civil
liability (for patent infringement). Having been decriminalized, probable cause for
the crime alleged could not possibly exist.
In the present case, the issue is whether the commission of an ISR activity, in the
manner that PLDT’s evidence shows, sufficiently establishes probable cause
for the issuance of search warrants for the crime of theft. Unlike in Savage, the
Court in Laurel was not confronted with the issue of decriminalization (which is a
legislative prerogative) but whether the commission of an ISR activity meets the
elements of the offense of theft for purposes of quashing an information. Since the
Court, in Laurel, ultimately ruled then an ISR activity justifies the elements of theft
that must necessarily be alleged in the information a fortiori, the RTC’s
determination should be sustained on certiorari.
The requirement of particularity in SWB–1 and SWB–2
On the issue of particularity in SW B–l and SW B–2, we note that the respondents
have not appealed to us the CA ruling that sustained paragraphs 1 to 6 of the
search warrants. Hence, we shall limit our discussion to the question of whether
the CA correctly ruled that the RTC gravely abused its discretion insofar as it
refused to quash paragraphs 7 to 9 of SW B–l and SWB–2.
Aside from the requirement of probable cause, the Constitution also requires that
the search warrant must particularly describe the place to be searched and the
things to be seized. This requirement of particularity in the description, especially
of the things to be seized, is meant to enable the law enforcers to readily identify
the properties to be seized and, thus, prevent the seizure of the wrong items. It
seeks to leave the law enforcers with no discretion at all regarding these articles
and to give life to the constitutional provision against unreasonable searches and
seizures.66 In other words, the requisite sufficient particularity is aimed at
preventing the law enforcer from exercising unlimited discretion as to what things
are to be taken under the warrant and ensure that only those connected with the
offense for which the warrant was issued shall be seized.67
The requirement of specificity, however, does not require technical accuracy in the
description of the property to be seized. Specificity is satisfied if the personal
properties' description is as far as the circumstances will ordinarily allow it to be so
described. The nature of the description should vary according to whether the
identity of the property or its character is a matter of concern.68 One of the tests
to determine the particularity in the description of objects to be seized under a
search warrant is when the things described are limited to those which bear direct
relation to the offense for which the warrant is being issued.69
Additionally, the Rules require that a search warrant should be issued “in
connection with one specific offense” to prevent the issuance of a scatter–shot
warrant.70 The one–specific–offense requirement reinforces the constitutional
requirement that a search warrant should issue only on the basis of probable
cause.71 Since the primary objective of applying for a search warrant is to obtain
evidence to be used in a subsequent prosecution for an offense for which the
search warrant was applied, a judge issuing a particular warrant must satisfy
himself that the evidence presented by the applicant establishes the facts and
circumstances relating to this specific offense for which the warrant is sought and
issued.72Accordingly, in a subsequent challenge against the validity of the
warrant, the applicant cannot be allowed to maintain its validity based on facts and
circumstances that may be related to other search warrants but are extrinsic to the
warrant in question.
Under the Rules, the following personal property may be subject of search warrant:
(i) the subject of the offense; (ii) fruits of the offense; or (iii) those used or intended
to be used as the means of committing an offense. In the present case, we sustain
the CA’s ruling nullifying paragraphs 7, 8 and 9 of SW B–l and SW B–2 for failing
the test of particularity. More specifically, these provisions do not show how the
enumerated items could have possibly been connected with the crime for which
the warrant was issued, i.e., P.D. No. 401. For clarity, PD No. 401 punishes:
Section 1. Any person who installs any water, electrical, telephone or piped
gas connection without previous authority from xxx the Philippine Long Distance
Telephone Company, xxx, tampers and/or uses tampered water, electrical or gas
meters, jumpers or other devices whereby water, electricity or piped gas is stolen;
steals or pilfers water, electric or piped gas meters, or water, electric and/or
telephone wires, or piped gas pipes or conduits; knowingly possesses stolen or
pilfered water, electrical or gas meters as well as stolen or pilfered water, electrical
and/or telephone wires, or piped gas pipes and conduits, shall, upon conviction,
be punished with prision correccional in its minimum period or a fine ranging from
two thousand to six thousand pesos, or both.73
Paragraphs 7 to 8 of SW B–l and SW B–2 read as follows:
7. COMPUTER PRINTERS AND SCANNERS or any similar equipment or device
used for copying and/or printing data and/or information;
8. SOFTWARE, DISKETTES, TAPES or any similar equipment or device used for
recording or storing information; and
9. Manuals, phone cards, access codes, billing statements, receipts, contracts,
checks, orders, communications and documents, lease and/or subscription
agreements or contracts, communications and documents relating to securing and
using telephone lines and/or equipment[.]74
According to PLDT, the items in paragraph 7 have a direct relation to violation of
PD No. 401 because the items are connected to computers that, in turn, are linked
to the unauthorized connections to PLDT telephone lines. With regard to the
software, diskette and tapes in paragraph 8, and the items in paragraph 9, PLDT
argues that these items are “fruits of the offense” and that the information it
contains “constitutes the business profit” of PLDT. According to PLDT, it
corroborates the fact that the respondents have made a business out of their illegal
connections to its telephone lines.
We disagree with PLDT. The fact that the printers and scanners are or may be
connected to the other illegal connections to the PLDT telephone lines does not
make them the subject of the offense or fruits of the offense, much less could they
become a means of committing an offense.
It is clear from PLDT’s submission that it confuses the crime for which SW B–l and
SW B–2 were issued with the crime for which SW A–l and SWA–2 were issued:
SW B–l and SW B–2 were issued for violation of PD No. 401, to be enforced in two
different places as identified in the warrants. The crime for which these search
warrants were issued does not pertain to the crime of theft – where matters of
personal property and the taking thereof with intent to gain become significant –
but to PD No. 401.
These items could not be the subject of a violation of PD No. 401 since PLDT itself
does not claim that these items themselves comprise the unauthorized
installations. For emphasis, what PD No. 401 punishes is the unauthorized
installation of telephone connection without the previous consent of PLDT. In the
present case, PLDT has not shown that connecting printers, scanners, diskettes
or tapes to a computer, even if connected to a PLDT telephone line, would or
should require its prior authorization.
Neither could these items be a means of committing a violation of PD No. 401
since these copying, printing and storage devices in no way aided the respondents
in making the unauthorized connections. While these items may be accessory to
the computers and other equipment linked to telephone lines, PD No. 401 does
not cover this kind of items within the scope of the prohibition. To allow the seizure
of items under the PLDT’s interpretation would, as the CA correctly observed, allow
the seizure under the warrant of properties for personal use of the respondents.
If PLDT seeks the seizure of these items to prove that these installations contain
the respondents' financial gain and the corresponding business loss to PLDT, then
that purpose is served by SW A–l and SW A–2 since this is what PLDT essentially
complained of in charging the respondents with theft. However, the same
reasoning does not justify its seizure under a warrant for violation of PD No. 401
since these items are not directly connected to the PLDT telephone lines and PLDT
has not even claimed that the installation of these items requires prior authorization
from it.
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the petition is PARTIALLY GRANTED. The
decision and the resolution of the Court of Appeals in CA–G.R. SP No. 89213 are
hereby MODIFIED in that SW A–l and SW A–2 are hereby declared valid and
constitutional.
SO ORDERED.
Endnotes:
1
Under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court.
2
Penned by Associate Justice Rebecca de Guia–Salvador, and concurred in by
Presiding Justice Ruben T. Reyes (now a retired member of this Court) and
Associate Justice Vicente Q. Roxas; rollo, pp. 60–81.
3
Id. at 84.
4
Penalizing the Unauthorized Installation of Water, Electrical or Telephone
Connections, the Use of Tampered Water or Electrical Meters and Other Acts.
5
Republic Act No. 7082.
6
Republic Act No. 7082, Section 1.
7
Rollo, p. 90.
8
Id. at 807–808.
9
International Direct Dialing. An IDD capable phone enables the caller to access
the toll–free number of the prepaid card.
10
Teresita S. Alcantara, Dante S. Cunanan and Abigail; rollo, p. 94.
11
Engr. Policarpio G. Tolentino, Jr.; ibid.
12
The following are the telephone numbers and their subscribers: 2–8222363 –
Abigail; 2–8210268 – Vernon; 2–7764922 – Abigail; 2–7764909 – Abigail; 2–
8243817 – Abigail; and 2–8243285 – Abigail; id. at 95.
13
2–8245911 and 2–8245244; id. at 95–96.
14
The following are the telephone numbers and their subscribers: 2–8245056 –
Experto Phils.; 2– 8224192 – Experto Phils.; 2–8247704 – Experto Enterprises;
2–8245786 – Experto Enterprises; and 2– 8245245 – Experto Enterprises; id. at
97.
15
Id. at 98.
16
Id. at 811.
17
Id. at 122–124; citation omitted.
18
Id. at 206–214. The application attached the affidavits of Wilfredo Abad, Jr., a
Section Supervisor of the PLDT’s ACPDD, and of Mr. Narciso. a Revenue
Assurance Analyst of the PLDT’s ACPDD.
19
Rollo, p. 92.
20
Id. at 358–369; Search Warrant No. 03–063 covering two different places and
Search Warrant No. 03–064 covering, as well, two different places.
21
Id. at 360.
22
Id. at 371–375.
23
Id. at 438–446.
24
Subsequently, the respondents also filed an Amended Motion to Quash
Search Warrants; id. at 391–401.
25
Id. at 405–435.
26
Id. at 455–459.
27
Id. at 479.
28
Id. at 461–464.
29
Id. at 481–502.
30
Id. at 66.
31
518 Phil. 409 (2006).
32
Rollo, pp. 614–637.
33
Citing Abuan v. People, 536 Phil. 672, 692 (2006).
34
Citing Uy v. Bureau of Internal Revenue, 397 Phil. 892, 903 (2000).
35
Laurel v. Judge Abrogar, supra note 31, at 422.
36
Under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court.
37
Laurel v. Judge Abrogar, supra note 3 1, at 434–441; citations omitted,
underscore ours.
38
Rollo, pp. 640–717. Joined by the Office of the Solicitor General.
39
In its Urgent Manifestation and Motion with Leave of Court, PLDT called the
Court’s attention of this recent ruling; id. at 872–875.
40
Laurel v. Abrogar, G.R. No. 155076, January 13, 2009. 576 SCRA 41, 50–51.
41
Id. at 51, citing Article 335 of the Civil Code of Spain.
42
Id. at 55–57; underscores ours.
43
Silva v. Presiding Judge, RTC of Negros Oriental, Br. XXXIII, G.R. No. 81756,
October 21, 1991, 203 SCRA 140, 144.
44
Abuan v. People, G.R. No. 168773, October 27, 2006, 505 SCRA 799, 822.
45
Rules of Court, Rule 126, Section 14.
46
Vallejo v. Court of Appeals, 471 Phil. 670 (2004).
47
Dra. Nepomuceno v. Court of Appeals, 363 Phil. 304, 307–308 (1999).
48
Vallejo v. Court of Appeals, supra note 46, at 686; and Uy v. Bureau of Internal
Revenue, supra note 34, at 906.
49
Del Castillo v. People, G.R. No. 185128, January 30, 2012, 664 SCRA 430,
438–439.
50
Solid Triangle Sales Corp. v. Sheriff, RTC, Q.C., Br. 93, 422 Phil. 72 (2001);
and Manly Sportwear Mfg., Inc. v. Dadodette Enterprises, and/or Hermes Sports
Center, 507 Phil. 375 (2005).
51
Under Section 3, Rule 126 of the Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure, the
personal properties that may be subject of seizure under a search warrant are
the subject, the fruits and/or the means of committing the offense.
52
329 Phil. 875(1996).
53
Id. at 905; italics supplied.
54
See Savage v. Judge Taypin, 387 Phil. 718, 728 (2000).
55
CIVIL CODE, Article 8.
56
Laurel v. Abrogar, supra note 40, at 57.
57
People v. Jabinal, 154 Phil. 565, 571 (1974), cited in Columbia Pictures, Inc. v.
CA, supra note 52, at 906–908.
58
Civil Code of the Philippines, Commentaries and Jurisprudence, Volume I,
Arturo M. Tolentino, p. 37.
59
Philippine Guardians Brotherhood, Inc. (PGBI) v. Commission on Elections,
G.R. No. 190529, April 29, 2010, 619 SCRA 585, 594–595.
60
Chinese Young Men’s Christian Association of the Philippine Islands v.
Remington Steel Corporation, G.R. No. 159422, March 28, 2008, 550 SCRA 180,
197–198.
61
RULES OF COURT, Rule 52, Section 1, in relation to Rule 56, Section 1.
62
G.R. No. 166562, March 31, 2009, 582 SCRA 694, 704; citation omitted, italics
supplied, emphasis ours.
63
See PLDT’s motion for reconsideration before the CA; rollo, p. 616.
64
Memorandum of Respondents; id. at 865.
65
Supra note 54.
66
Hon Ne Chan v. Honda Motor Co., Ltd., 565 Phil. 545, 557 (2007).
67
Vallejo v. Court of Appeals, supra note 46, at 686–687.
68
Microsoft Corp. v. Maxicorp, Inc., 481 Phil 550, 568–571 (2004).
69
Bache and Co. (Phil.), Inc. v. Ruiz, No. L–32409, February 27, 1971, 37 SCRA
823, 835, cited in Al–Ghoulv. Court of Appeals, 416 Phil. 759, 771 (2001).
70
Tambasen v. People, 316 Phil. 237, 243–244 (1995).
71
See Stonehill v. Diokno, No. L–19550, June 19, 1967. 20 SCRA 383, 391–392.
72
See Tambasen v. People, supra note 70.
73
Emphases and underscores ours.
74
Supra note 21