Melo v. People

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SECOND DIVISION

[G.R. No. L-3580. March 22, 1950.]

CONRADO MELO , petitioner-appellant, vs . THE PEOPLE OF THE


PHILIPPINES and THE COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE OF RIZAL ,
respondents-appellees.

Jose A. Fojas for petitioner.


First Assistant Solicitor General Roberto A. Gianzon and Solicitor Martiniano P.
Vivo for respondents.

SYLLABUS

1. CRIMINAL PROCEDURE, RULES OF; DOUBLE JEOPARDY; THE SAME OR


IDENTICAL OFFENSE. — One who has been charged with an offense cannot be again
charged with the same or identical offense though the latter be lesser or greater than
the former. "As the government cannot begin with the highest, and then go down step
by step, bringing the man into jeopardy for every dereliction included therein, neither
can it begin with the lows and ascend to the highest with precisely the same result."
2. ID.; ID.; SECOND OFFENSE NOT IN EXISTENCE; RULE OF IDENTITY OF
OFFENSE DOES NOT APPLY. — The rule of identity does not apply, however, when the
second offense was not in existence at the tome rst prosecution, for the simple
reason that in such case there is no possibility for the accused, during the rst
prosecution, to be convicted for an offense that was then inexistent. Thus, where the
accused was charged with physical injuries and after conviction the injured person dies,
the charge for homicide against the same accused does not put him twice in jeopardy.
3. ID.; ID.; ID.; ID. — "Where after the rst prosecution a new fact supervenes
for which the defendant is responsible, which changes the character of the offense and,
together with the facts existing at the time, constitute a new and distinct offense" (15
Am. Jur., 66), the accused cannot be said to be in second jeopardy if indicated for the
new offense.
4. ID.; ID.; "STARE DECISIS"; FORMER PRECEDENTS OVERRULED. — The ruling
laid down in People vs. Tarok (73 Phil., 260), as followed in People vs. Villasis, G.R. No.
L-1218, promulgated September 15, 1948 (Supp. to Off. Gaz., January, 1950, Vol. 46,
No. 1, p. 268), is expressly repealed. Such ruling is not only contrary to the real meaning
of "double jeopardy" as intended by the Constitution and by the Rules of court, but is
also obnoxious to the administration of justice.

DECISION

MORAN , C.J : p

Petitioner Conrado Melo was charged in the Court of First Instance of Rizal, on
December 27, 1949, with frustrated homicide, for having allegedly in icted upon
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Benjamin Obillo, with a kitchen knife and with intent to kill, several serious wounds on
different parts of the body, requiring medical attendance for a period of more than 30
days, and incapacitating him from performing his habitual labor for the same period of
time. On December 29, 1949, at eight o'clock in the morning, the accused pleaded not
guilty to the offense charged, and at 10:15 in the evening of the same day Benjamin
Obillo died from his wounds. Evidence of death was available to the prosecution only
on January 3, 1950, and on the following day, January 4, 1950, an amended information
was led charging the accused with consummated homicide. The accused led a
motion to quash the amended information alleging double jeopardy, motion that was
denied by the respondent court; hence, the instant petition for prohibition to enjoin the
respondent court from further entertaining the amended information.
Brushing aside technicalities of procedure and going into the substance of the
issues raised, it may readily be stated that the amended information was rightly
allowed to stand. Rule 106, section 13, 2d paragraph, is as follows:
"If it appears at any time before judgment that a mistake has been made in
charging the proper offense, the court may dismiss the original complaint or
information and order the ling of a new one charging the proper offense,
provided the defendant would not be placed thereby in double jeopardy, and may
also require the witnesses to give bail for their appearance at the trial."
Under this provision, it was proper for the court to dismiss the rst information
and order the ling of a new one for the reason that the proper offense was not
charged in the former and the latter did not place the accused in a second jeopardy for
the same or identical offense.
"No person shall be twice put in jeopardy of punishment for the same offense,"
according to Article III, section 1 (20) of our Constitution. The rule of "double jeopardy"
had a settled meaning in this jurisdiction at the time our Constitution was promulgated.
It meant that when a person is charged with an offense and the case is terminated
either by acquittal or conviction or in any other manner without the consent of the
accused, the latter cannot again be charged with the same or identical offense. This
principle is founded upon the law of reason, justice and conscience. It is embodied in
the maxim of the civil law non bis in idem, in the common law of England, and
undoubtedly in every system of jurisprudence, and instead of having speci c origin it
simply always existed. It found expression in the Spanish law and in the Constitution of
the United States and is now embodied in our own Constitution as one of the
fundamental rights of the citizens.
It must be noticed that the protection of the Constitutional inhibition is against a
second jeopardy for the same offense, the only exception being, as stated in the same
Constitution, that "if an act is punished by a law and an ordinance, conviction or
acquittal under either shall constitute a bar to another prosecution for the same act."
The phrase same offense, under the general rule, has always been construed to mean
not only that the second offense charged is exactly the same as the one alleged in the
rst information, but also that the two offenses are identical. There is identity between
the two offenses when the evidence to support a conviction for one offense would be
su cient to warrant a conviction for the other. This so- called "same-evidence test"
which was found to be vague and de cient, was restated by the Rules of Court in a
clearer and more accurate form. Under said Rules there is identity between two
offenses not only when the second offense is exactly the same as the rst, but also
when the second offense is an attempt to commit the rst or a frustration thereof, or
when it necessarily includes or is necessarily included in the offense charged in the rst
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information. (Rule 113, sec. 9; U.S. vs. Lim Suco, 11 Phil., 484; U.S. vs. Ledesma, 29 Phil.,
431; People vs. Martinez, 55 Phil., 6.) In this connection, an offense may be said to
necessarily include another when some of the essential ingredients of the former as
alleged in the information constitute the latter. And vice-versa, an offense may be said
to be necessarily included in another when all the ingredients of the former constitute a
part of the elements constituting the latter (Rule 116, sec. 5.) In other words, one who
has been charged with an offense cannot be again charged with the same or identical
offense though the latter be lesser or greater than the former. "As the Government
cannot begin with the highest, and then go down step by step, bringing the man into
jeopardy for every dereliction included therein, neither can it begin with the lowest and
ascend to the highest with precisely the same result." (People vs. Cox, 107 Mich., 435,
quoted with approval in U.S. vs. Lim Suco, 11 Phil., 484; see also U.S. vs. Ledesma, 29
Phil., 431 and People vs. Martinez, 55 Phil., 6, 10.)
This rule of identity does not apply, however, when the second offense was not in
existence at the time of the rst prosecution, for the simple reason that in such case
there is no possibility for the accused, during the rst prosecution, to be convicted for
an offense that was then inexistent. Thus, where the accused was charged with physical
injuries and after conviction the injured person dies, the charge for homicide against the
same accused does not put him twice in jeopardy. This is the ruling laid down by the
Supreme Court of the United States in the Philippine case of Diaz vs. U.S., 223 U.S., 442,
followed by this Court in People vs. Espino, G.R. No. 46123, 69 Phil., 471, and these two
cases are similar to the instant case. Stating it in another form, the rule is that "where
after the rst prosecution a new fact supervenes for which the defendant is
responsible, which changes the character of the offense and, together with the facts
existing at the time, constitutes a new and distinct offense" (15 Am. Jur., 66), the
accused cannot be said to be in second jeopardy if indicted for the new offense.
This is the meaning of "double jeopardy" as intended by our Constitution for it
was the one prevailing in the jurisdiction at the time the Constitution was promulgated,
and no other meaning could have been intended by our Rules of Court.
Accordingly, an offense may be said to necessarily include or to be necessarily
included in another offense, for the purpose of determining the existence of double
jeopardy, when both offenses were in existence during the pendency of the rst
prosecution, for otherwise, if the second offense was then inexistent, no jeopardy could
attach therefor during the rst prosecution, and consequently a subsequent charge for
the same cannot constitute second jeopardy. By the very nature of things there can be
no double jeopardy under such circumstance, and our Rules of Court cannot be
construed to recognize the existence of a condition where such condition in reality
does not exist. General terms of a statute or regulation should be so limited in their
application as not to lead to injustice, oppression, or an absurd consequence. It will
always, therefore, be presumed that exceptions have been intended to their language
which would avoid results of this character. (In re Allen, 2 Phil., 641.)
When the Rules of Court were drafted, there was absolutely no intention of
abandoning the ruling laid down in the Diaz case, and the proof of this is that although
the said Rules were approved on December 1939, yet on January 30, 1940, this Court
decided the Espino case reiterating therein the Diaz doctrine. Had that doctrine been
abandoned deliberately by the Rules of Court as being unwise, unjust or obnoxious,
logically it would have likewise been repudiated in the Espino case by reason of
consistency and as a matter of justice to the accused, who should in consequence have
been acquitted instead of being sentenced to a heavy penalty upon the basis of a
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doctrine that had already been found to be wrong. There was absolutely no reason to
preclude this Court from repealing the doctrine in the Espino case, for as a mere
doctrine it could be repealed at any time in the decision of any case where it is invoked.
The fact that it was not so abandoned but reiterated, is a clear proof that the mind of
the Court, even after the approval of the Rules, was not against but in favor of said
doctrine.

For these reasons we expressly repeal the ruling laid down in People vs. Tarok,
73 Phil., 260, as followed in People vs. Villasis, 46 Off. Gaz. (Supp. to No. 1), p. 268.
Such ruling is not only contrary to the real meaning of "double jeopardy" as intended by
the Constitution and by the Rules of Court but is also obnoxious to the administration
of justice. If, in obedience to the mandate of the law, the prosecuting o cer les an
information within six hours after the accused is arrested, and the accused claiming his
constitutional right to a speedy trial is immediately arraigned, and later on a new fact
supervenes which, together with the facts existing at the time, constitutes a more
serious offense, under the Tarok ruling, no way is open by which the accused may be
penalized in proportion to the enormity of his guilt. Furthermore, such a ruling may open
the way to suspicions or charges of collusion between the prosecuting o cers and the
accused, to the grave detriment of public interest and con dence in the administration
of justice, which cannot happen under the Diaz ruling.
Before closing, it is well to observe that when a person who has already suffered
his penalty for an offense, is charged with a new and greater offense under the Diaz
doctrine herein reiterated, said penalty may be credited to him in case of conviction for
the second offense.
For all the foregoing, the petition is denied, and the respondent court may
proceed to the trial of the criminal case under the amended information. Without costs.
Ozaeta, Pablo, Padilla, Tuason, Montemayor and Reyes, JJ., concur.

Separate Opinions
BENGZON , J., concurring and dissenting :

I agree that People vs. Tarok and People vs. Villasis should be overruled. But I
submit that the effect of such overruling should be prospective, in the sense that it
should not affect the herein petitioner who has relied thereon in presenting his case.
(Moncado vs. Tribunal del Pueblo, 45 Off. Gaz., p. 2850.)

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