CRIM LAW 1 Notesss
CRIM LAW 1 Notesss
CRIM LAW 1 Notesss
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
PENALTIES
PENALTY is the suffering that inflicted by the state for the transgression of law.
PURPOSE OF PENALTIES
• Retribution or Expiation the penalty is commensurate with the gravity of the
offense.
• Self-Defense - the state has a right to punish the criminal as a measure of self-
defense so as to protect society from the threat and wrong inflicted by the
criminal.
• Justice - that the crime must be punished by the state as an act of retributive
justice, a vindication of absolute right and moral law violated by the criminal.
CONSTITUTIONAL PROHIBITIONS
Article III of 1987 Constitution
Section 18 (1)
• No person shall be detained solely by reason of his political beliefs and
aspirations.
Section 19 (1)
• Excessive fines shall not be imposed, nor cruel, degrading or inhuman
punishment inflicted. Neither shall death penalty be imposed, unless for
compelling reasons involving heinous crimes, the congress hereafter provides for
it. Any death imposed shall be reduced to reclusion perpetua.
Section 20
No person shall be imprisoned for debt or nonpayment of poll tax.
Section 22
No ex post facto law or bill of attainder shall be enacted.
RULING: Petition denied, penalty in law imposed to acts committed after approval of
law. Future acts are punishable.
Page 1 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
a. Makes a criminal done before law was passed and punishes act innocent when
done.
b. Aggravates a crime, makes it greater than it was.
c. Inflicts greater punishment than the law prescribed when committed.
d. Alters legal rules of evidence and authorizes conviction upon less or different
tests.
e. Assuming to regulate civil rights and remedies only in effect imposes penalty or
deprivation of right which when done was lawful.
f. Deprives a person accused of a crime some lawful protection to which he has
become entitled, such as the protection of a former conviction of acquittal or
proclamation of amnesty.
PEOPLE VS FERRER
FACTS: Hon. Judge Simeon Ferrer is the Tarlac Trial Court Judge that declared RA 1700
or the Anti Subversive Act of 1957 as a bill of attainder and dismissing the information of
subversion against Feliciano Co, a leader of the CPP and Nilo Tayag and other five
members being a leader and member of the NPA inciting, instigating people to unite
and overthrow the Philippine Government. The accused maintain that RA 1700 creates
a presumption of guilt among CPP-NPA members and that they are punished for mere
membership.
Issue: Whether RA 1700 or the Anti Subversive Act of 1957 is a bill of attainder
RULING: No. The court holds the validity of the Anti-Subversion Act of 1957. A bill of
attainder is solely a legislative act. It punishes without the benefit of the trial. It is the
substitution of the judicial determination to a legislative determination of guilt. In order
for the statute to be measured as a bill of attainder the following requisite must be
present: (1) the statute specifies persons, groups; (2) the statute is applied retroactively
and reached pass conduct.
The government has yet to prove at trial that the accused joined the party
knowingly, willfuly, and by overt acts, and that they joined the party knowing its
subversive objective and with specific intent to further its goal which is to overthrow the
government by all means necessary including force, deceit, etc.
The presumption of guilt among the organization would be correct if the statute
were construed as punishing mere membership devoid of any specific intent to further
its goals.
PEOPLE VS BRACAMONTE
FACTS: September 23, 1987, appellant Bracamonte and his companions robbed the
house of Violeta Parnala. Appellants killed their maid including her son. Bracamonte
was sentenced to reclusion perpetua for the crime of robbery and double homicide
under Art.294 (1) of Revised Penal Code in which R.A 7659 re imposes the death penalty
that took effect on December 31, 1993.
RULING: No. The Supreme Court held that the imposition of death penalty would violate
the basic rule in Criminal Law, that if the new law imposes a heavier penalty, the law in
force at the time of the commission of the offense shall be applied which in this case
shall be applied, which is Art 294(1) of the Revised Penal Code sans the death penalty
clause by virtue of section 19 (1). Article III of the Constitution provides, excessive fines
shall not be imposed, nor cruel, degrading or inhuman punishment inflicted. Neither
shall death penalty be imposed, unless for compelling reasons involving heinous crimes,
the congress hereafter provides for it. Any death imposed shall be reduced to reclusion
perpetua. The Congress hereafter provides for it. Any death penalty imposed shall be
reduced to reclusion perpetua.
Page 2 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
PEOPLE VS VALDEZ
FACTS: That on September 17,1995, Rolando Valdez and his companions flagged down
and fired at the tricycle using unlicensed firearms which the victims were riding. Valdez
was sentenced with death for frustrated murder and double frustrated murder and
reclusion perpetua for illegal possession of firearms. A new law, RA8294 ammended
earlier firearm laws making illegal possession of firearms merely an aggravating
circumstance and not a separate offense.
CONTENTION OF THE ACCUSED: The accused holds that there should be no separate
conviction for illegal possession of firearms in view of R.A 8294.
ISSUE: Whether or not R.A 8294 should be given retroactive application in view of two
separate charges.
RULING: The Supreme Court held the contention of the accused with regard to the
charge of illegal possession of firearms. The Supreme Court states that penal laws can
be given a retroactive effect if it benefits the accused. R.A 8294 states that no separate
conviction for illegal possession of firearms if other offense are involved. Clearly, R.A
8294 is advantageous to the accused as it will spare him with the separate conviction
under the charge of illegal possession of firearms. Hence, the new law should be given
retroactive application.
With regard to the charge of multiple murders, the Supreme Court held that R.A
8294 should not be given retroactive application as it does not favor the accused. It
only aggravates the crime. The new law treats the use of unlicensed firearms as a
special aggravating circumstance thereby increasing the penalty from four reclusion
perpetua to four-fold death.
A felony shall be punishable only by the penalty prescribed by law at the time of
its commission.
ARTICLE 22.Retroactive effect of penal laws. – Penal laws shall have a retroactive effect
insofar as they favor the person guilty of a felony, who is not a habitual criminal, as this
term is defined in Rule 5 of Article 62 of this Code, although at the time of the
publication of such laws a final sentence has been pronounced and the convict is
serving the same.
Habitual Delinquent is a person who, within a period of 10 years from the date
of his release or last conviction of the crimes of Serious Physical Injuries, Less
Page 3 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
The court can sua sponte apply the retroactivity of a penal law irrespective of whether
or not the acused applied for it.
PEOPLE VS PATALIN
FACTS: Patalin and Mijaque were convicted of robbery and rape against the Aliman
family. This occured on August 11,1984 and this crime at the time was punishable by
death. The 1987 Constitution abolished death penalty and reduced them to reclusion
perpetua. Then Congress eventually restored the death penalty on January 1, 1994 by
virtue of R.A 7659. The case was promulgated on June 14, 1995.
ISSUE: When the death penalty was abolished in 1987 and was retroactively applied to
herein accused, did they gain a vested right that any future act restoring death penalty
would no longer cover them?
PEOPLE VS GALLO
FACTS: Maritess is Romeo Gallo‘s only daughter. Maritess got raped numerous times by
her own father from 1993. Maritess finally reported it to her auntie who prompted
authorities to act. Death penalty is imposed as Gallo‘s punishment on Jan 1998.
Gallo now filed a motion to reopen the case seeking a modification of the death
sentence to reclusion perpetua in line with a new court ruling involving rules in criminal
procedure which requires that aggravating circumstances must be duly alleged in the
information for it to be appreciated during trial. In Gallo‘s case, the attending
circumstances were not alleged in the information.
RULING: Yes. Supreme Courts held in favor of the accused. Article 22 of the Revised
Penal Code Penal laws shall have a retroactive effect insofar as they favor the person
guilty of a felony who is not a habitual criminal, as this term is defined in Rule 5 of Article
62 of this Code, although at the time of publication of such laws a final sentence has
been pronounced and the convict is serving the same.
Gallo is rightfully entitled to the beneficial application of Garcia ruling, which has
the force and effect of a law. It forms part of our penal statutes as it is favorable to an
accused who is not a habitual criminal, notwithstanding that final sentence had
already been pronounced against him.
PEOPLE VS GANO
Page 4 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Facts: Gano was convicted of robbery with homicide. However, new rules require that
qualifying and aggravating circumstances be alleged in the information for them to be
appreciated.
Ruling. Yes. Rule 110 of the Revised Rules on Criminal Procedure, which took effect 1
December 2000 states:
Sec. 8. Designation of the offense. - The complaint or information shall state the
designation of the offense given by the statute, aver the acts or omissions constituting
the offense, and specify its qualifying and aggravating circumstances. If there is no
designation of the offense, reference shall be made to the section or subsection of the
statute punishing it.
Sec. 9. Cause of the accusation. - The acts or omissions complained of as constituting
the offense and the qualifying and aggravating circumstances must be stated in
ordinary and concise language and not necessarily in the language used in the statute
but in the terms sufficient to enable a person of common understanding to know what
offense is being charged as well as its qualifying and aggravating circumstances and
for the court to pronounce judgment.
Pursuant to the aforequoted amended provisions, the Rules now require that the
information or complaint allege not only the qualifying but the aggravating
circumstances as well, otherwise, the same cannot be properly appreciated. Guided
by the consecrated rule that when a penal statute, substantive and remedial or
procedural, is favorable to the accused, the courts shall give it a retroactive
application and so we must in this case as the Information does not allege dwelling as
an aggravating circumstance.
PEOPLE VS RAMIREZ
FACTS: At around 11 in the evening Elmer Morales, Myrna Pasobillo, Sonia Dagdagan
and Nida were walking along the GuadalupeBridge, MakatiCity when accused Arnold
Ramirez, about an arm length away, pulled out his gun, declared hold up, took
everything of value and ordered them to walk away silently. Before the group could
move any further, Nida became hysterical and shouted for help alarming the accused
who fired at them killing Myrna. Ramirez was found convicted of robbery with homicide
and was sentenced to death.
In the advent of new court rulings, the aggravating circumstances were not
alleged. The new rule specifically requires qualifying and aggravating circumstances to
be alleged in the information.
PEOPLE VS BUAYABAYAN
Page 5 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
FACTS:: Paulino Buayabayan and others all armed, entered the house of Dioscoro
Abalanes, killed the latter by shooting him in the neck then forcibly took the sum of
P30,000.00 from the victims wife an also from Rolando Verdida an amount of P10,000.00.
After the robbery, they all fled.
ISSUE: Can the ordinary aggravating circumstance of band in the commission of the
crime be appreciated when it is not properly alleged in the information?
RULING: No, the 2000 Rules on Criminal Procedure require that even generic
aggravating circumstances must be alleged in the information. With regard to its
Section 9, the use of the word "must" indicate that the requirement is mandatory and
therefore, the failure to comply with section 9, Rule 110 means that the generic
aggravating circumstances though proven at trial cannot be appreciated if such
circumstances are not stated in the information.
Total Repeal
When the repeal is total, absolute or expressed, criminal liability under the former
law is obliterated. Therefore, if an accused has a pending case which was expressly
decriminalized by a new law, such case will be automatically dismissed. For those who
are convicted or serving time, they shall be released.
Total Repeal
As to pending Case will be
cases. dismissed.
As to those who Convicts shall be
are convicted or released unless the
are serving time new law expressly
provides that
detention
continues.
As to Criminal Criminal liability is
Liability extinguished.
With reenactment
Criminal liability still subsists
1. when the provisions of the former law are reenacted
2. when the repeal is implied
3. when there is a saving clause of the former law.
Therefore if a repealing law still punishes an act criminalized under an old law,
criminal liability still subsists.
As to implied repeal- the repeal of penal law which impliedly repealed an old
penal law revives the old law. 3 laws are needed. The first law makes an act
criminal. The second law impliedly repealed the first law. A third law now
repealed the second law.
PEOPLE VS PIMENTEL
FACTS:In 1983, accused Tujan was charged with Subversion under R.A No. 1700 and a
warrant of arrest was issued but was not served for he was at large. On 1990 Tujan was
arrested on the basis of the warrant on subversion, but when he was arrested, an
unlicensed firearm .38 calibers with ammunition was in his possession. Consequently,
tujan was charged the 2nd time with illegal possession of firearms and ammunition.
Page 6 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
ISSUE: Whether or not he was placed in double jeopardy with the filling of the second
information for illegal possession of firearms and ammunitions in furtherance of
subversion.
Exception: Express pardon by the offended party will bar criminal prosecution in the
following cases:
1. Concubinage
2. Adultery
3. Seduction
4. Abduction
5. Rape *
6. Acts of Lasciviousness
Note: Since Rape is now a crime against persons, it should be considered deleted from
the list.
Page 7 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
ARTICLE 36. Pardon; its effects- A pardon shall not work the restoration of the right to
hold public office, or the right of suffrage, unless such rights be expressly restored by the
terms of the pardon.
For CASARAPA, pardon by the offended party is only a bar to criminal prosecution.
Art 89 does not mention pardon by the offended party as a mode of extinguishing
criminal liability.
RA 8353 classifies rape as a crime against persons. The only way to pardon an
offender is through a subsequent valid marriage between the offender and the rape
victim.
Section 1. Short Title. - This Act shall be known as "The Anti-Rape Law of
1997."
Sec. 2. Rape as a Crime against Persons. - The crime of rape shall hereafter
be classified as a Crime Against Persons under Title Eight of Act No. 3815, as
amended, otherwise known as the Revised Penal Code. Accordingly, there
shall be incorporated into Title Eight of the same Code a new chapter to be
known as Chapter Three on Rape, to read as follows:
"Chapter Three: Rape…..‖
"In case it is the legal husband who is the offender, the subsequent
forgiveness by the wife as the offended party shall extinguish the criminal
action or the penalty: Provided, That the crime shall not be extinguished or
the penalty shall not be abated if the marriage is void ab initio.
Page 8 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
It is deemed that the husband has consented or impliedly pardoned his wife
when no action is taken by him to assert his right as husband despite knowing for
7 years that his wife was having extramarital affairs (People vs Sansano).
It is deemed that the wife had impliedly pardoned the husband when there is
obvious lack of interest in prosecuting as evidenced by failure to attend trial and
returning back to live with his husband as a family (People vs Cornejo).
PEOPLE VS LUNA
FACTS: Juan Luna attempted to abduct 12 years of age Juana Isidro. He was
condemned to 1 year, 8 months and 20 days of prision correccional with accessories
and payment of costs. Tomas Rivera, a representative of her daughter, granted express
pardon in favor of Luna, remitting the penalty to which he may have become liable,
having been granted generously with out consideration of recompense or coercion.
ISSUE: Whether or not penal action or liability to the penalty fixed for its punishment may
be extinguished by the pardon made by the father in behalf of a minor.
RULING: The Supreme Court said that granting of a pardon, in the name or behalf of a
minor is not sufficient to extinguish penal action. In order that the pardon produce its
effects it must be made by the person injured or in case the person is a minor the
parents or guardian of such person must take part in granting thereof. But the granting
of pardon by this person alone, in the name or in behalf of the minor is not sufficient,
because, as the offense, essentially and directly affects the injured party, she alone is
entitled to remit the offense and to authorize the extinction of the penal action.
PEOPLE VS SENSANO
FACTS: Ursula Sensano committed adultery and concubinage to Marcelo Ramos
against her husband Mariano Ventura. Ursula asks and beg that she will be a faithful
wife but Marcelo did not accept. Thereafter, Ursula and her child went back to
Marcelo. Mariano went to Hawaii and in his return, he charged them of adultery for
second time.
CONTENTION OF THE ACCUSED: Seven years of absence from the Philippine Island, and
knowing about the illicit relationship since then before he leaves the country constitutes
implied pardon.
ISSUE: By doing nothing and failing to assert his right as a husband despite acquisence
to the fact of adultery, is Mariano Ventura estopped from instituting criminal action?
RULING: Yes. There is no merit in the argument that it was impossible for the husband to
take any action against the accused within the seven years. Apart from the fact that
the husband was assuming a mere pose when he signed the complaint as offended
party or offended spouse, we have come to the conclusion that the evidence in this
case and his conduct warrant the inference that he consented to the adulterous
relations existing between the accused and therefore he is not authorized by law to
institute this criminal proceeding.
Page 9 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
PEOPLE VS CORNEJO
FACTS: Offended party is the legitimate wife of the appellant Francisco Cornejo and
the other appellant Esmeralda de Guzman. Emilia filed a complaint for concubinage
against the appellants but said case was dismissed due to non appearance and
express pardon of the offended party. Subsequently on march 8, 1993 another
complaint for the said offense was filed against said appellant and found guilty.
CONTENTION OF THE ACCUSED: There was an expressed pardon by the offended party.
ISSUE: Whether or not pardon by the offended party may extinguish the criminal liability
of the accused.
RULING: Although under the former law a pardon by the offended party did not
extinguish the criminal action, it now extinguishes said action according to the Revised
Penal Code in force and in this provision being favorable to the accused, is applicable
to the facts that took place before it became effective.
PEOPLE VS NERY
FACTS: Nery and Federico Matillano entered into agreement that the former will deliver
a sum of P230.00 as payment of 2 diamond rings given by the latter. However, Nery
failed to comply with the agreement which forced Federico to file a complaint against
Nery.
CONTENTION OF THE ACCUSED: Nery argues that she was not able to deliver the money
since her prospective buyer withdraws from the transaction and that she was looking
for another buyer.
ISSUE: Whether or not the compromise of novation of contract entered into extinguish
the criminal liability.
RULING: Supreme Court rejected the theory of novation by Nery because the alleged
novation occurred after the criminal case had been instituted and while it was pending
in the trial. Public offense which must be prosecuted and punish by the government on
its own motion through complete separation should have been made of the damage
suffered by the offended party and not affected by compromise.
Novation is not one of the means recognized by the Penal Code whereby
criminal liability can be extinguished.
PEOPLE VS LIM
FACTS:Delilah was raped by her cousin Ruben. Considering that accused and victim
are cousins, both parties have come up with an agreement not to press charges.
However, the prosecutor filed the information for rape before accused‘s acts were
condoned.
ISSUE: Whether or not pardon is valid after the criminal action has been instituted.
RULING: Supreme Court ruled that pardon must be made prior to the institution of the
criminal action.
In any case, to warrant the dismissal of the complaint, the victim‘s pardon or
retraction should be made prior to the institution of a criminal case. The present case
was filed on Feb. 24 1988 while the Affidavit of desistance was executed only on March
1, 1988.
PEOPLE VS MAKILANG
Page 10 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
FACTS: On July 30, 1996, accused Erlindo Makilang by means of force and intimidation
raped Evelyn Makilang 12 years old against her will in Binan Laguna.
ISSUE: Whether the accused is entitled to the provision of pardon when the offended
party who is a minor is the only person granting pardon without parent or guardian‘s
consent..
RULING: No. In cases where the offended party is a minor, the pardon must be given by
both the parents and the offended party. Here, while it appears that Evelyn forgave
appellant, the records are bereft of any similar act from her mother. Thus, appellant‘s
plea that he was effectively pardoned must fail.
ARTICLE 24.Measures of prevention or safety which are not considered penalties. – The
following shall not be considered as penalties:
1. The arrest and temporary detention of accused persons, as well as their
detention by reason of insanity or imbecility, or illness requiring confinement in a
hospital.
2. The commitment of a minor to any of the institutions mentioned in Article 80 and
for the purposes specified therein.
3. Suspension from the employment or public office during the trial or in order to
institute proceedings.
4. Fines and other corrective measures which, in the exercise of their administrative
or disciplinary powers, superior officials may impose upon their subordinates.
5. Deprivation of rights and the reparations which the civil law may establish in
penal form.
Reason: Preventive and corrective measures are not penalties because they are not
imposed as a result of conviction in judicial proceedings. Penalty is always imposed
upon conviction in a criminal case. Preventive measures take place before conviction
while corrective measures are imposed not in a criminal case.
Art 24 gives justification for detaining the accused. Otherwise the accused‘s
rights to due process and presumption of innocence are violated.
The fines mentioned in paragraph 4 are not imposed by the court because if
they do, it constitutes a penalty. However a superior officer in the exercise of
administrative power may impose it as a corrective measure.
Page 11 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
(3) Upon judicial declaration of abandonment of the child in a case filed for the
purpose;
(4) Upon final judgment of a competent court divesting the party concerned of
parental authority; or
II. IMPOSABLE PENALTIES AND THEIR GRADATION (ART. 25), DURATION AND EFFECTS
ARTICLE 25.Penalties which may be imposed. – The penalties which may be imposed,
according to this Code, and their different classes, are those included in the following:
SCALE
PRINCIPAL PENALTIES
Capital punishment:
Death
Afflictive penalties:
Reclusion perpetua
Reclusion temporal
Perpetual or temporary absolute disqualification
Perpetual or temporary special disqualification
Prision mayor
Correctional penalties:
Prision correccional
Arresto mayor
Suspension
Destierro
Light penalties:
Arresto menor
Public censure
ACCESSORY PENALTIES
Page 12 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Payment of costs.
A. Principal Penalties
Principal Penalty – that provided by law for a felony and which is imposed by the court
expressly upon conviction
According to divisibility:
Divisible – those that have fixed duration and are divisible into 3 periods known
as minimum, medium and maximum
Indivisible – those that do not have duration (Death, Reclusion Perpetua, Public
Censure)
According to gravity:
Capital
Afflictive
Correctional
Light
According to subject matter:
Corporal (death)
Deprivation of freedom (reclusion perpetua)
Reduction of freedom (destierro)
Deprivation of rights (disqualification and suspension)
Pecuniary (fine)
1. Capital Punishment
ARTICLE 40.Death – Its accessory penalties. – The death penalty, when it is not executed
by reason of commutation or pardon shall carry with it that of perpetual absolute
disqualification and that of civil interdiction during thirty years following the date of
sentence, unless such accessory penalties have been expressly remitted in the pardon.
RA 7659 (AN ACT TO IMPOSE THE DEATH PENALTY ON CERTAIN HEINOUS CRIMES,
AMENDING FOR THAT PURPOSE THE REVISED PENAL LAWS, AS AMENDED, OTHER SPECIAL
PENAL LAWS, AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES) – approved December 13, 1993
Page 13 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
NOTE: Article 81 of the RPC (as further amended by RA 8177) ―Art. 81. When and
how the death penalty is to be executed. – The death sentence shall be
executed with the preference to any other penalty and shall consist in putting
the person under the sentence to death by lethal injection. The death sentence
shall be executed under the authority of the Director of the Bureau of
Corrections, endeavoring so far as possible to mitigate the sufferings of the
person under the sentence during the lethal injection as well as during the
proceedings prior to the execution.
―The Director of the Bureau of Corrections shall take steps to ensure that
the lethal injection to be administered is sufficient to cause the instantaneous
death of the convict.
―Pursuant to this, all personnel involved in the administration of lethal
injection shall be trained prior to the performance of such task.
―The authorized physician of the Bureau of Corrections, after thorough
examination, shall officially make a pronouncement of the convict‘s death and
shall certify thereto in the records of the Bureau of Corrections.
―The death sentence shall be carried out not earlier than one (1) year nor
later than eighteen (18) months after the judgment has become final and
executor without prejudice to the exercise by the President of his executive
clemency powers at all times.‖
(See also Article III, Section 19 of the 1987 Constitution, Articles 40, 47, 81-85 of the
Revised Penal Code)
Article 40.Death - Its accessory penalties. - The death penalty, when it is not executed
by reason of commutation or pardon shall carry with it that of perpetual absolute
disqualification and that of civil interdiction during thirty years following the date of
sentence, unless such accessory penalties have been expressly remitted in the pardon.
ARTICLE 47.In what cases the death penalty shall not be imposed; Automatic Review of
Death Penalty Cases. – The death penalty shall be imposed in all cases in which it must
be imposed under existing laws, except when the guilty person is below eighteen (18)
years of age at the time of the commission of the crime or is more than seventy (70)
years of age or when upon appeal or automatic review of the case by the supreme
court, the required majority vote is not obtained for the imposition of the death penalty,
in which cases the penalty shall be reclusion perpetua.
In all cases where the death penalty is imposed by the trial court, the records
shall be forwarded to the Supreme Court for automatic review and judgment by the
court en banc, within twenty (20) days but not earlier than fifteen (15) days after
promulgation of the judgment or notice of denial of any motion for new trial or
reconsideration. The transcript shall also be forwarded within ten (10) days after the
filing thereof by the stenographic reporter. (Amended by R.A. No. 9346.)
Page 14 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
(1) When the guilty person is below 18 years of age at the time of the commission
of the crime.
(2) When the guilty person is more then 70 years of age.
(3) When upon appeal or automatic review of the case by the Supreme Court,
the required majority vote is not obtained for the imposition of the death
penalty.
In all three instances, the penalty shall be reclusion perpetua.
RA 9346 (AN ACT PROHIBITING THE IMPOSITION OF DEATH PENALTY IN THE PHILIPPINES) –
approved June 24, 2006
This Act provides that in lieu of the death penalty, the following shall be imposed:
a) The penalty of reclusion perpetua, when the law violated makes use of the
nomenclature of the penalties of the RPC; or
b) The penalty of life imprisonment, when the law violated does not make use of
the nomenclature of the penalties of the RPC.
RULING: The Supreme Court held that punishments are cruel when it involves torture or a
lingering death, but the punishment imposed upon him is not cruel. It implies there is
something in human and barbarous, something more than the mere extinguishment of
life. In the case at bar, if the term of imprisonment is indefinite and might last through
the natural life of the petitioner, the sentence imposed upon him will end if he complies
with the court order. The judgment cannot be said to be excessive or unjust because its
as if ―he carries the keys to his prison in his own pocket‖. Its purpose is to coerce the
contender to do an act within his power to perform.
CONTENTION OF ACCUSED: With the 1987 Consitution suspending the penalty of death,
the imposable penalty upon them is reclusion temporal to reclusion perpetua.
CONTENTION OF STATE: It is not the intent of the 1987 Constitution to adjust the two
remaining periods into three divisible periods.
Page 15 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
ISSUE: Whether the 1987 Constitution intended to adjust the penalty of reclusion
perpetua and other lower periods too.
CONTENTION OF THE ACCUSED: Accused argues that the trial court erred in imposing
the extreme penalty of death despite the plea of the accused for humanitarian
consideration as well as the plea of guilty, and the defense of intoxication which
mitigates his liability deserves a penalty of reclusion perpetua only.
RULING: No. The Court finds no reason to alter, much less to reverse, the decision of the
trial court. The evidence establishes beyond reasonable doubt the guilt of accused-
appellant.
The trial court judge correctly rejected the claim of intoxication as a mitigating
circumstance. To be considered mitigating, intoxication must be shown to have so
impaired his will power that he did not know what he was doing or could not
comprehend the wrongfulness of his acts.
To be considered a mitigating circumstance, a plea of guilty must be made
spontaneously by the accused, in open court, prior to the presentation of evidence for
the prosecution. In the cases at bar, accused-appellant at first pleaded not guilty and
only confessed his guilt after the prosecution‘s first witness was nearly finished with her
testimony.
But even if the plea of guilty entered by accused satisfied the requisites laid
down by law, it would not serve to mitigate his liability for qualified rape and justify the
imposition of a lighter penalty. As provided by Article 335 (RPC), as amended by RA
7659, the seven circumstances enumerated in this provision are special qualifying
circumstances, the presence of any of which takes the case out of the purview of
simple rape and effectively qualifies the same by increasing the penalty one degree
higher. Qualified rape is punishable by death, which must be applied regardless of any
mitigating or aggravating circumstance.
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES V. HON. LORENZO VENERACION, Presiding Judge (RTC,
National Capital Judicial Region), HENRY LAGARTO and ERNESTO CORDERO
FACTS: On or about the 2nd day of August 1994, the said accused conspiring and
confederating together with one ABUNDIO LAGUNDAY alias ―JR,‖ JEOFREY and HENRY
LAGARTO and helping one another, with treachery, taking advantage of their superior
strength and nocturnity and ignominy, and with the use of force and violence, that is,
by taking Angel Alquiza y Lagman into a pedicab, and once helpless, forcibly bringing
her to a nearby warehouse, covering her mouth, slashing her vagina, hitting her head
with a thick piece of wood and stabbing her neck did then and there willfully,
unlawfully and feloniously have carnal knowledge of the person of said Angel Lagman,
Page 16 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
a minor, 7 years of age, against the latter‘s will and consent and on said occasion the
said accused together with their confederates caused her fatal injuries which were the
direct cause of her death immediately thereafter.
After trial and presentation of evidence, the trial court, (under respondent Judge
Veneracion) finding the defendants Henry Lagarto and Ernesto Cordero guilty beyond
reasonable doubt of the crime of Rape with Homicide, sentenced accused with the
penalty of reclusion perpetua with all the accessories provided for by law.
The prosecutor filed a motion for reconsideration asking for the modification of
penalty from reclusion perpetua to death as provided by art. 335 of the RPC as
ammended by RA 7659. Such motion was denied by Judge Veneracion.
CONTENTION OF THE ACCUSED: Respondent judge claims that the Court cannot take
cognizance of the said Motion for Reconsideration for lack of jurisdiction.
After weighing the evidence of the prosecution and defendant at trial, the
respondent judge found the accused guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crime
charged. Since the law in force at the time the crime was committed was RA 7659, the
respondent judge was bound by its provisions. Said provision does not leave any room
for the exercise of discretion on the part of the trial judge. Respondent judge is found to
have acted without or in excess of his jurisdiction or with grave abuse of discretion
amounting to a lack of jurisdiction in imposing the penalty of reclusion perpetua where
the law clearly imposes the penalty of death.
CONTENTION OF THE COUNSEL FOR ACCUSED: Despite the appellant still at large, the
sentence has to be reviewed by the Supreme Court.
Page 17 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
RULING: Yes. The power of the Supreme Court to review a decision imposing death
penalty can not be waived either by the court or accused. Such procedure is merciful.
It gives second chance to life.
ISSUE: Whether prescribing death penalty for crimes where the offended party was not
killed is excessive and unconstitutional.
RULING:No.Majority of the members of the Supreme Court has held the validity of RA
7659 with only 4 Associate Justices dissenting and claiming that said law is indeed
unconstitutional. Insofar as the element of heinousness is concerned, RA 7659 has
correctly identified crimes warranting the mandatory penalty of death.
The court does not agree that the gauge of whether or not a crime warrants the
death penalty is the attendance of the circumstance of death. Death penalty is
imposed in heinous crimes because the perpetrators thereof have committed
unforgiveable execrable acts that have so deeply dehumanized a person or criminal
acts with severely destructive effects on the national efforts to lift masses from object
poverty, and because they have caused irreparable and substantial injury to both their
victim and society and a repetition of their acts would pose actual threat to the safety
of individuals and the survival of the government, they must be permanently prevented
from doing so.
CONTENTION OF STATE: Repeal of the law is not imminent. The final judgment must be
carried out.
RULING: This Court‘s resolution temporarily restraining the execution of the petitioner
must be put in its proper perspective as it has been gravely distorted especially by
those who make a living vilifying the courts.
The suspension was temporary, until Jan. 15, 199, coeval with the Constitutional
duration of the present regular Congress, unless it sooner becomes certain that no
repeal or modification of the law is going to be made. The extreme caution taken by
the Court was compelled among others by the fear that any error of the Court will
preclude any further relief for all rights stop at the graveyard.
Page 18 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
The TRO has served its purpose; no immediate repeal will be made. The TRO must
be lifted.
CONTENTION OF THE ACCUSED: The penalty for three counts of rape should not be
death penalty because the rapes were committed before R.A 8353 took effect on
October 22, 1997 amending Article 355 of the Revised Penal Code.
ISSUE: Whether or not death penalty should be imposed as provide in Article 266 of the
Revised Penal Code as amended by R.A 8353.
RULING: The Supreme Court rendered judgment in favor of the accused. In death
penalty cases, the Supreme Court puts into question not only the guilt of the accused
but also the question of the imposition of the death penalty itself. In the case at bar, the
court acknowledged that the limited schooling of the accused, who is unlettered
fisherman shall be favorable, to him which should at least warrant the exercise of the
courts discretion imposing the death penalty.
The trial court convicted the accused on 3 counts of rape under the provisions of
RA 8353. However the crimes for which he was convicted were committed in 1996,
before RA 8353 took effect in 1997. Prior to its amendment by RA 8353, Art. 335 of RPC
required a criminal complaint before information can be filed. In the alleged case of
Daisy, no such complaint was made. The case must be dropped.
CONTENTION OF THE ACCUSED: Contends that his alleged confessions are in admissible
in evidence because they had been obtained in violation of his contitutional rights,
consisting of circumstantial evidence is inadequate to establish his guilt beyond
reasonable doubt.
ISSUE: Whether the court a quo erred in appreciating Domantays extra judicial
confession and convicting him despite failure of prosecution to prove his guilt beyond
reasonable doubt.
RULING: The trial courts conviction of the accused is modified finding Domantay guilty
of the crime of Homicide not rape with the aggravating circumstance of abuse of
superior strength. As clearly stated in the Supreme Court, with respect to the extra-
judicial confession made by him, it was admissible for it was not done during custodial
investigation, does outside the prospective walls of the Miranda Rights.
CONTENTION OF THE ACCUSED: Accused claims to be 18 years old at the time of the
commission of the crime thus, not entitled to death penalty.
ISSUE: Whether or not the trial court erred in imposing the capital punishment of death
in the crime of rape with homicide considering the appellant‘s age.
Page 19 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
RULING: The death penalty imposed by the trial court is correct. Rape is an ignominous
crime for which is neither can excuse nor does there exist any other rational justification
other than lust, and in criminal law, those who lust and kill ought not to last. Rape is
burdened with supreme penalty of death.
The death penalty shall be imposed except when the guilty person is under 18
years old at the time of the commission of the crime, or is more than 70 years old or
when on appeal or automatic review of the case by the Supreme Court, the majority
vote is not obtained for the imposition of the death penalty, in which cases, the penalty
shall be reclusion perpetua.
Appellant tried to alter his date of birth to show that he was only 17 years of age
at the time of the commission of the crime. Again, the record rebuffs appellant on this
point considering that he was proven to be more than 20 years when he did the
heinous act.
CONTENTION OF THE ACCUSED: Accused Paraiso contends that there were facts and
circumstances that the court did not considered in his favor. He argues that he is one of
the neighbors of the witnesses which should make them identify him immediately and
report him to the police.
ISSUE: Does Supreme penalty of death should be imposed upon the accused despite of
his alleged contention?
RULING: Yes, supreme penalty of death must be imposed upon the accused since his
contention of the delay of witness in reporting the crime is untenable. Applying Article
63 of the Revised Penal Code, the penalty proper to be imposed is death which is the
maximum penalty as provided by law. Because, in the instant acse, there are two
aggravating circumstances that was appreciated which aggravates the crime from
reclusion perpetua up to death and there being no mitigating circumstance to offset it.
As what Judge Davide Jr. quote ― May God have mercy on your soul, Rolando
Paraiso‖.
Page 20 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
RULING: The correct penalty should be reclusion perpetua in accordance with Article
248 of the Revised Penal Code. As held time and again, life imprisonment and
reclusion perpetua are different and distinct from each other.
As noted from the dispositive portion of the challenged decision, the trial court
imposed the penalty of „reclusion perpetua or life imprisonment.‘ Evidently, it
considered the latter as the English translation of the former, which is not the case. Both
are different and distinct penalties.
RULING: It is held that the proof provided by the prosecution is insufficient to show
conspiracy or treachery; therefore, the accused is guilty of homicide and not murder.
In previous cases, the SC held that Illegal Possession of Firearms does not absorb
the crime of homicide or murder under the RPC and therefore does not bar the
subsequent or simultaneous prosecution for the latter crime. In People v. Quijada it was
held that one who kills another with the use of an unlicensed firearm is guilty of two
separate offenses of (1) either homicide or murder under the Revised Penal Code and
(2) aggravated illegal possession of firearm under P.D. No. 1866, Section 1 paragraph 2.
Furthermore, the SC held that the trial court erred in imposing in this case the
penalty of life imprisonment for accused-appellant's violation of P.D. No. 1866, Section
1, paragraph 2. The crime of illegal possession of firearm in its aggravated form is
Page 21 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
punishable by the penalty of death. Since the offense was committed on September
16, 1990, at a time when the imposition of the death penalty was prohibited, the
penalty next lower in degree, i.e., reclusion perpetua, should instead be imposed. This is
not the equivalent of the penalty of life imprisonment, as cases have time and again
explained.
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES V. BOBBY LUSA
FACTS: Sometime in September, 1993 in Barangay Alcalde, Tibig, Silang, Cavite, at 12
midnight , 14-year-old Michelle Lusa woke up to find her father touching her private
parts. She removed his hands and kicked the accused, which caused him to leave. But,
on October, 1993, at 3:00 a.m., the appellant succeeded in raping her and repeated it
for approximately 10 more times. When her aunt accosted her growing abdomen, she
disclosed her ordeal. Together with her aunt, Michelle executed a Sinumpaang
Salaysay in the Silang Police Station. After which, they went to the Municipal Health
Office where she was found pregnant.
The victim went to Manila and stayed with the family of a certain Bibes, and
upon delivery, gave up her child for adoption since she would not be able to support
him.
With the Sinumpaang Salaysay and Medical Certificate, Michelle filed a
complaint against her father.
On April 12, 1995 the trial court convicted accused-appellant of rape and
accordingly sentenced him to suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua or life
imprisonment.
RULING OF THE SUPREME COURT: Accused-appellant should be convicted of only one
count of rape as the prosecution failed to establish and prove all other rapes allegedly
committed after the first incident. The sentence imposed by the trial court was
―reclusion perpetua or life imprisonment. This is erroneous since reclusion perpetua is not
the same as life imprisonment. Article 335 of the RPC (When and how rape is
committed) only mentions reclusion perpetua; on the other hand, life imprisonment is
imposed only as a penalty under special laws.
Page 22 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
At the time of the commission of the crime, the penalty for Murder was reclusion
temporal in its maximum period to death. Article 64 of the Revised Penal Code provides
the rules for the determination of the appropriate penalty in such case.
In the case at bar, since there was no further aggravating or mitigating
circumstance, the penalty should be imposed in its medium period, that is, reclusion
perpertua.
Accused-appellant is not entitled to the benefits of Indeterminate Sentence Law
because Section 2 of said law provides that the Act shall not apply to persons
convicted of offenses punished with death penalty or life imprisonment. The term life
imprisonment has been construed to include reclusion perpetua.
ARTICLE 41. Reclusion perpetua and reclusion temporal – Their Accessory penalties. –
The penalties of reclusion perpetua and reclusion temporal shall carry with them that of
civil interdiction for life or during the period of sentence as the case may be, and that
of perpetual absolute disqualification which the offender shall suffer even though
pardoned as to the principal penalty, unless the same shall have been expressly
remitted in the pardon.
ARTICLE 42. Prision mayor – Its accessory penalties. – The penalty of prision mayor shall
carry with it that of temporary absolute disqualification and that of perpetual special
disqualification from the right of suffrage which the offender shall suffer although
pardoned as to the principal penalty, unless the same shall have been expressly
remitted in the pardon.
Reclusion Perpetua As indivisible Penalty
Under RA 7659, the legal duration of Reclusion Perpetua is 20 years and 1 day to 40
years. However, the Supreme Court ruled that it is still an indivisible penalty as there is no
clear intent from the legislature to change its classification as an indivisible penalty;
hence, it has no legal duration (as indivisible penalties have no duration.)
With the advent of RA 7659, the first ruling by the Supreme Court maintained that
although reclusion perpetua is an indivisible penalty, Art. 65 of the RPC may be
applied, hence dividing it into 3 periods. (People vs. Lucas, 1994). However, upon
review by the SC, reclusion perpetua although having a definite term remains an
indivisible penalty for there is no clear legislative intent to alter its original
classification. (People vs Lucas, 1995)
Page 23 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
FACTS: Chanda Lucas was raped by her father Conrado Lucas, starting when she was 9
years old and ending when she was 17 years old. The rape happened every time the
mother was out, Chanda cannot resist because she was threatened to be killed
anytime by her father.
Lucas was convicted of 2 counts of rape and was sentenced to reclusion
perpetua for each count. Lucas now appeals his sentence. The Supreme Court in
deliberating whether Lucas is guilty or not went on to discuss further how reclusion
perpetua would be applied considering the amendments introduced by RA 7659.
CONTENTION OF LUCAS: He maintains his innocence and further advances that should
he be convicted, he must suffer the 20 years and 1 day to 26 years and 8 months of
reclusion perpetua in its minimum period.
ISSUE: Whether or not reclusion perpetua may be divided into periods for the purpose of
determining the proper duration based on attending circumstances.
RULING: Yes. It is an indivisible penalty with a defined period- 20 years and 1 day to 40
years. In any event, Art 65 may be applied dividing it into 3 periods such that reclusion
perpetua has now 3 periods in minimum, medium and maximum.
Reclusion Perpetua: minimum- 20 years and 1 day to 26 years and 8
months
Medium- 26 years 8 months and 1 day to 33 years
and 4 months
Maximum- 34 years, 4 months and 1 day to 40 years
ISSUE: Whether or not reclusion perpetua may be divided into periods for the purpose of
determining the proper duration based on attending circumstances.
RULING: No.
Reclusion perpetua is an indivisible penalty; it has no minimum, medium and
maximum periods. It is imposed in its entirety regardless of any mitigating and
aggravating circumstance. The Court resolved to modify its decision on May 25, 1994 in
Page 24 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
this case by deleting the disquitions whether reclusion perpetua is a divisible penalty
and setting aside its decision dividing it into 3 periods.
The court concludes that although Sec. 17 of RA 7659 has fixed the duration of
reclusion perpetua, there was no clear legislative intent to alter its original classification
as an indivisible penalty. It remains an indivisible penalty.
CONTENTION OF THE ACCUSED: The penalty should be modified, invoking the case of
People vs. Lucas. The accused invokes that reclusion perpetua is a divisible penalty,
that in his case there is no aggravating or mitigating circumstance, so he should only
suffer the medium period of reclusion perpetua which is 26 years, 8 months and 1 day
to 33 years and 4 months.
ISSUE: Whether or not reclusion perpetua may be divided into periods for the purpose of
determining the proper duration based on attending circumstances.
RULING: No. Pursuant to Section 21 of R.A 7659, reclusion perpetua has now defined
duration from 20 years and 1 day to 40 years. It may thus be said that although the law
has now fixed the duration of reclusion perpetua. It did not make it explicit intention to
convert it into a divisible penalty.
In the case at bar, Supreme Court ruled that since reclusion perpetua is an
invisible penalty, it has no minimum, medium and maximum period. It is imposed in its
entirety regardless of any mitigating or aggravating circumstances that may have
attended the commission of the crime.
Lucas, 240 SCRA 66, modified past decisions.
RULING: No. There was no justification or need to specify the length because reclusion
perpetua is an indivisible penalty. Reclusion perpetua is imprisonment for life but the
person sentenced to suffer it shall be pardoned after undergoing the penalty for 30
years, unless by reason of his conduct or some other serious cause, he shall be
considered by the Chief Executive as unworthy of pardon.
ISSUE: Whether or not reclusion perpetua may be divided into periods for the purpose of
determining the proper duration based on attending circumstances.
RULING:No. The error of the trial court was in imposing penalties in these cases based on
the original doctrine in Lucas which was not yet final and executory and stillopen for
reconsideration and reversal which was further decided upon a re-examination dated
Page 25 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
January 9, 1995 where the court decided that it is still an indivisible penalty. The Court,
this time, held that in spite of the amendment putting the duration of reclusion
perpetua at 20 years and 1 day to 40 years, it should remain as an indivisible penalty
since there was never any intent on the part of Congress to reclassify it into a divisible
penalty.
CONTENTION OF THE ACCUSED: Accused Alvarado allege that the penalty of reclusion
perpetua be modified since the trial court did not prove his guilt beyond reasonable
doubt.
RULING: The Supreme Court held that reclusion perpetua is an indivisible penalty. No
minimum, no medium and no maximum periods and it is imposed in its entirety
regardless of any mitigating or aggravating circumstances that may have attended
the commission of the crime. Supreme Court observed that a modification in the
penalty imposed on the appellant is called for in view of the amendment of Article 27
of the Revised Penal Code that the duration of Reclusion Perpetua is from 20 years and
2 day to 40 years.
CONTENTION OF THE PEOPLE:Under Art. 248 of RPC, the penalty for murder at the time
of the commission of the crime in April 1991 was reclusion temporal to death. The
penalty for murder was death and since death penalty was suspended, life
imprisonment must be the sentence.
CONTENTION OF THE ACCUSED: Under the RPC, reclusion perpetua is the substitute for
death, it being the most afflictive.
Issue: Whether reclusion perpetua is the proper penalty in cases where death penalty is
suspended.
RULING: No. Accused-appellant is liable, not for a complex crime of double murder,
but for two separate counts of murder and separate counts of physical injuries.
Under Article 248 of the RPC, the penalty for murder at the time of commission of
the crime in April 1991 was reclusion temporal maximum to death. The trial court
sentenced accused to suffer the penalty of life imprisonment. The proper imposable
penalty is reclusion perpetua.
The penalty of life imprisonment and reclusion perpetua are not the same. They
are distinct in nature, duration and in accessory penalties.
ISSUE: Whether or not there is a need to specify the duration of reclusion perpetua in
giving it as a sentence
Page 26 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
RULING: No. The trial court erred in imposing the penalty of 40 years of reclusion
perpetua. While Art. 27 of RPC as amended by RA 7659 fixes the duration of reclusion
perpetua , it still remains an indivisible penalty in the absence of clear legislative intent
to alter its classification. Hence, in applicable cases, reclusion perpetua should simply
be imposed without specifying its duration.
ARTICLE 27.Reclusion temporal. – The penalty of reclusion temporal shall be from twelve
years and one day to twenty years.
Note: A plebiscite is not contemplated in Article 30, paragraph 2, hence the offender
may vote in that exercise subject to applicable election laws.
Page 27 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
office. Moreover, the offender shall not be permitted to hold any public office during
the period of his disqualification.
b. Prision Mayor
Prision mayor and temporary disqualification. – The duration of the penalties of prision
mayor and temporary disqualification shall be from six years and one day to twelve
years, except when the penalty of disqualification is imposed as an accessory penalty,
in which case, its duration shall be that of the principal penalty.
ARTICLE 42. Prision mayor – Its accessory penalties. – The penalty of prision mayor shall
carry with it that of temporary absolute disqualification and that of perpetual special
disqualification from the right of suffrage which the offender shall suffer although
pardoned as to the principal penalty, unless the same shall have been expressly
remitted in the pardon.
Prision Mayor – 6 years and 1 day to 12 years (Article 27 of the RPC)
Accessory Penalties (as provided by Article 42 of the RPC):
1) Temporary absolute disqualification; and
2) Perpetual special disqualification from the right of suffrage.
CORRECTIONAL PENALTIES
Art. 39 (1)
Art. 39. Subsidiary penalty. — If the convict has no property with which to meet the fine
mentioned in the paragraph 3 of the nest preceding article, he shall be subject to a
subsidiary personal liability at the rate of one day for each eight pesos, subject to the
following rules:
1. If the principal penalty imposed be prision correccional or arresto and fine, he
shall remain under confinement until his fine referred to in the preceding
paragraph is satisfied, but his subsidiary imprisonment shall not exceed one-third
of the term of the sentence, and in no case shall it continue for more than one
year, and no fraction or part of a day shall be counted against the prisoner.
a. Prision Correccional
Prision correccional, suspension, and destierro. – The duration of the penalties of prision
correccional, suspension, and destierro shall be from six months and one day to six
years, except when suspension is imposed as an accessory penalty, in which case, its
duration be that of the principal penalty.
ARTICLE 43. Prision correccional – Its accessory penalties. – The penalty of prision
correccional shall carry with it that of suspension form public office, from the right to
follow a profession or calling, and that of perpetual special disqualification from the
right of suffrage, if the duration of said imprisonment shall exceed eighteen months. The
offender shall suffer the disqualification provided in this article although pardoned as to
the principal penalty, unless the same shall have been expressly remitted in the pardon.
Prision Correccional – 6 months and 1 day to 6 years (Article 27 of the RPC)
Accessory Penalties (as provided by Article 43 of the RPC):
1) Suspension from public office;
2) Suspension from the right to follow a profession or calling; and
Page 28 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
3) Perpetual special disqualification from the right of suffrage, if the duration of said
imprisonment shall exceed eighteen months.
b. Arresto Mayor
Arresto mayor. – The duration of the penalty of arresto mayor shall be from one month
and one day to six months.
ARTICLE 44. Arresto – Its accessory penalties. – The penalty of arresto shall carry with it
that of suspension of the right to hold office and the right of suffrage during the term of
the sentence.
Arresto Mayor – one month and 1 day to 6 months (Article 27 of the RPC)
Accessory Penalties of Arresto (as provided by Article 44 of the RPC):
1) Suspension of the right to hold office; and
2) Suspension of the right of suffrage.
c. Suspension
ARTICLE 33. Effects of the penalties of suspension from any public office, profession, or
calling, or the right of suffrage. – The suspension from public office, profession, or calling,
and the exercise of the right of suffrage shall disqualify the offender from holding such
office or exercising such profession or calling or right of suffrage during the term of the
sentence.
The person suspended from holding public office shall not hold another having
similar functions during the period of his suspension.
d. Destierro
Destierro (Article 87 of the RPC)
Any person sentenced to destierro shall not be permitted to enter the place or
places designated in the sentence, nor within the radius specified, which shall
not be more than 250 km and not less than 25 km from the place designated.
A principal, correctional and divisible penalty.
Page 29 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
LIGHT PENALTIES
a. Arresto Menor
Arresto Menor – one day to thirty days (Article 27 of the RPC)
Accessory Penalties –Article 44 of the RPC- Art. 44. — The penalty of arresto shall carry
with it that of suspension of the right too hold office and the right of suffrage during the
term of the sentence.
Note: Article 88 of the RPC… “The penalty of arresto
menor shall be served in the municipal jail, or in the house of
the defendant himself under the surveillance of an officer of
the law, when the court so provides in its decision, taking
into consideration the health of the offender and other
reasons which may seem satisfactory to it…”
b. Public Censure
Page 30 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
(c) Light penalty if it be less than 200 pesos. (Provided by Article 26 of the RPC)
When the principal penalty imposed be only a fine, the subsidiary imprisonment shall
not exceed six months, if the culprit shall have been prosecuted for a grave or less
grave felony, and shall not exceed fifteen days, if for a light felony. (Art 39 (2), RPC)
The courts may impose a fine at their own discretion provided that it is within the
limits prescribed by law. In fixing the amount of fine in each case, attention shall be
given not only to the mitigating or aggravating circumstances, but more particularly to
the wealth or means of the culprit. (Article 66 of the RPC; Imposition of fines)
Page 31 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
B. Accessory Penalties
3. Suspension from public office, the right to vote and be voted for, the profession
or calling
The penalties of suspension from any public office, profession or calling, or the
right of suffrage shall: (Article 33 of the RPC)
(1) Disqualify the offender from holding such office or exercising such profession
or calling or right of suffrage during the term of the sentence;
(2) Ban person from holding any other public office having similar functions
during the period of his suspension.
4. Civil Interdicition
ARTICLE 34. Civil Interdiction. – Civil interdiction shall deprive the offender during the
time of his sentence of the rights of parental authority, or guardianship, either as to the
person or property of any ward, of marital authority, of the right to manage his property,
and of the right to dispose of such property by any act or conveyance inter vivos.
Civil Interdiction shall deprive the offender during the time of his sentence of the
rights of:
Page 32 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
5. Indemnification
NOTE: Article 107 of the RPC, which provides for what is included in
Indemnification ---
(a) Consequential damages to the injured party
(b) Damages suffered by the injured party‘s family
(c) Damages suffered by a third person by reason of the crime
6. Bond
As provided by Art. 35, RPC
a. The offender must present two sufficient sureties who shall undertake that the
offender will not commit the offense and if such offense be committed, they
will pay the amount determined by court.
b. The offender must deposit such amount with the clerk of court to guarantee
said undertaking or
c. The offender may be detained, if he cannot give the bond, for a period not
more than 6 months if prosecuted for grave or less gave felony, or for a
period not more than 30 days, if for a light felony. (Art 35).
ARTICLE 45. Confiscation and forfeiture of the proceeds of the crime or instruments of
the crime. – Every penalty imposed for the commission of a felony shall carry with it the
forfeiture of the proceeds of the crime and the instruments or tools with which it was
committed.
Such proceeds and instruments or tools shall be confiscated and forfeited in
favor of the Government, unless they be the property of a third person not liable for the
offense, but those articles which are not subject of lawful commerce shall be
destroyed.
Page 33 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
8. Payment of Costs
ARTICLE 37. Cost – What are included. – Costs shall include fees and indemnities in the
course of the judicial proceedings, whether they be fixed or unalterable amounts of
previously determined by law or regulations in force, or amounts not subject to
schedule.
COSTS OF THE SUIT – are the expenses of the litigation allowed and regulated by the
Rules of Court to be assessed against or to be recovered by a party in litigation
NOTE: No costs shall be allowed against the Republic of the
Philippines unless otherwise provided by law.
Costs (in criminal cases) are chargeable only in case
of conviction. In case of acquittal, the costs are de oficio –
the parties shall bear their own expenses.
Art. 38.Pecuniary liabilities; Order of payment. — In case the
property of the offender should not be sufficient for the payment of
all his pecuniary liabilities, the same shall be met in the following
order:
1. The reparation of the damage caused.
2. Indemnification of consequential damages.
3. The fine.
4. The cost of the proceedings.
C. Subsidiary Penalty
ARTICLE 39. Subsidiary penalty. – If the convict has no property with which to meet the
fine mentioned in paragraph 3 of the next preceding article, he shall be subject to a
subsidiary personal liability at the rate of one day for each eight pesos, subject to the
following rules:
Page 34 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Even if the offender cannot pay the pecuniary liabilities by reason of insolvency,
the offender cannot be required to undergo subsidiary penalty in the following
instances:
(1) When the penalty imposed is higher than Prision Correccional.
(2) For failure to pay the costs of the proceedings there is no subsidiary penalty.
(3) When the penalty imposed is fine and a penalty not to be executed by
confinement in a penal institution and has no fixed duration, there is no
subsidiary penalty.
(4) When subsidiary imprisonment is not stated in the decision.
Page 35 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Subsidiary penalty is possible only when any of the following penalties is imposed:
(a) Prision correccional;
(b) Suspension and fine;
(c) Destierro;
(d) Arresto mayor;
(e) Arresto menor; and
(f) Fine only.
When the penalty prescribed for the offense is imprisonment, it is the penalty
actually imposed by the court not the penalty provided for by the Code which shall be
considered in determining whether or not subsidiary penalty should be imposed.
Article 9 (RPC): Grave felonies, less grave felonies and light felonies.
Grave felonies are those to which the law attaches the capital punishment or
penalties which in any of their periods are afflictive, in accordance with Art. 25.
Less grave felonies are those which the law punishes with penalties which in their
maximum period are correctional.
Light felonies are those infractions of law for the commission of which a penalty of
arresto menor or a fine not exceeding 200 pesos or both; is provided.
A. GENERAL RULES
Page 36 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Page 37 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
The same rules shall be observed with regard to fines that do not
consist of a fixed amount, but are made proportional.
TABLE SHOWING THE DURATION OF DIVISIBLE PENALTIES AND THE TIME INLCUDED IN EACH
OF THEIR PERIODS
Prision mayor, From 6 years Rom 6 years From 8 years From 10 years
absolute and 1 day to and 1 day to 8 and 1 day to and 1 day to
disqualification 12 years. years. 10 years. 12 years.
and temporary
disqualification
Arresto mayor From 1 month From 1 month From 2 months From 4 moths
and 1 day to 6 to 2 months. and 1 day to 4 and 1 day to 6
months. months. months.
Page 38 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
a. Executive Order 214, July 10, 1987. (the same as Art. 29 of the Revised
Penal Code)
Ruling: Art. 63, paragraph 2, rule 3 will be applied; when the commission of
the act is attended by some mitigating circumstance and there is no
aggravating circumstance, the lesser penalty shall be applied. Parricide is
punishable from reclusion perpetua to death. Hence, there are two
mitigating circumstance that attended the commission of the act, the
penalty should be reclusion perpetua.
The SC credited the appellant with one-half of any preventive
imprisonment he has undergone. The SC forwarded Formigones Case to the
office of the Chief Executive for lighter penalty.
Page 39 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
for the frustrated felony shall be imposed upon the accomplices in the
commission of a frustrated felony.
Page 40 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
following the minimum prescribed and of the two next following, which
shall be taken from the penalty prescribed, if possible; otherwise, from
the penalty immediately following in the above-mentioned respective
graduated scale.
5. When the law prescribes a penalty for a crime in some
manner not specially provided for in the four preceding rules, the
courts, proceeding by analogy, shall impose corresponding penalties
upon those guilty as principals of the frustrated felony, or of attempt to
commit the same, and upon accomplices and accessories.
Ruling: The rape was on its attempted stage because the alleged
touching is merely a stroked on the external surface of the female organ,
and there must be sufficient and convincing proof that the pennies
indeed touched the labias or slid into the female organ for rape to be
consummated.
The penalty for attempted rape is two (2) degrees lower than the
impossible penalty of death for the offense charged, which is statutory
rape of a minor below seven (7) years. Two degrees lower is reclusion
temporal, the range of which is twelve (12) years and one (1) day to
twenty (20) years. Applying the Indeterminate Sentence Law, and in the
absence of any mitigating or aggravating circumstance, the maximum of
the penalty to be imposed upon the accused shall be taken from the
medium period of reclusion temporal, the range of which is fourteen (14)
years, eight (8) months and (1) day to seventeen (17) years and four (4)
months, while the minimum shall be taken from the penalty next lower in
degree, which is prision mayor, the range of which is from six (6) years and
one (1) day to twelve (12) years, in any of its periods.
Page 41 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Page 42 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Article 64. Rules for the application of penalties which contain three
periods. — In cases in which the penalties prescribed by law contain
three periods, whether it be a single divisible penalty or composed of
three different penalties, each one of which forms a period in
accordance with the provisions of Articles 76 and 77, the court shall
observe for the application of the penalty the following rules,
according to whether there are or are not mitigating or aggravating
circumstances:
1. When there are neither aggravating nor mitigating
circumstances, they shall impose the penalty prescribed by law in its
medium period.
2. When only a mitigating circumstance is present in the
commission of the act, they shall impose the penalty in its minimum
period.
3. When an aggravating circumstance is present in the
commission of the act, they shall impose the penalty in its maximum
period.
4. When both mitigating and aggravating circumstances are
present, the court shall reasonably offset those of one class against the
other according to their relative weight.
5. When there are two or more mitigating circumstances and
no aggravating circumstances are present, the court shall impose the
penalty next lower to that prescribed by law, in the period that it may
deem applicable, according to the number and nature of such
circumstances.
6. Whatever may be the number and nature of the
aggravating circumstances, the courts shall not impose a greater
penalty than that prescribed by law, in its maximum period.
7. Within the limits of each period, the court shall determine the
extent of the penalty according to the number and nature of the
aggravating and mitigating circumstances and the greater and lesser
extent of the evil produced by the crime.
Page 43 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Facts: Bernardo Lacanilao, a police officer, was found guilty for the crime of
homicide because of the death of Ceferino Erese. He is performing his duty
as a policeman but shooting Erece was not necessary. The CA sentenced
him to indeterminate penalty of six (6) years and one (1) day of prision mayor,
as the minimum, to twelve (12) years and one (1) day of reclusion temporal,
as the maximum.
Ruling: The present case would have fallen under No. 5 of Article 11 if the two
conditions therefore, viz: (1) that the accused acted in the performance of
duty or lawful exercise of a right of office and (2) that the injury or offense
committed be necessary consequence of the due performance of such duty
or the lawful exercise of such right or office, concurred. But here only the first
condition is fulfilled, the second is wanting.
Consequently, Article 69 is applicable, for the requirement ―that the
majority of such conditions be present‘ is immaterial since there are only two
conditions in order that the circumstance in No. 5 of Article 11 may be taken
into account. Article 69 is, obviously, in favor of the accused as it provides for
a penalty lower than that prescribed by law when the crime committed is not
wholly justifiable, the intention of the legislature being to mitigate the penalty
by reason of the diminution of either freedom of action, intelligence, or intent,
or of the lesser perversity of the offender.
The petitioner is hereby SENTENCED to an indeterminate penalty of
from two (2) years, four (4) months, and one (1) day of prision correccional,
to eight (8) years and one (1) day of prision mayor.
B. SPECIFIC RULES
a. Kinds
Page 44 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
c. Rebellion
Facts: It was the height of the government action against communists and
the Hukbalahap guerillas. President Elpidio intensified the campaign
against them.
On January 20, 1951, the Congress of Labor organizations (CLO)
headquarters was raided. Amado V. Hernandez was arrested for various
activities with the CLO. Upon his request, he was charged in the Criminal
Information of Rebellion with Murder, Arson and Robbery. Five years after
his arrest, Hernandez asked for bail with the court where his case was
pending. Petition for bail was denied on the ground that the complex
crime charged against Hernandez required the denial of bail.
Held: Petition for bail was granted. Rebellion cannot be complexed with
other crimes, such as murder and arson. Rebellion itself would include and
absorb the said crimes, thus granting the accused his right to bail. Murder
and arson are crimes inherent and concomitant when rebellion is taking
place. Rebellion in the RPC constitutes one single crime and that there is
no reason to complex it with other crimes.
Page 45 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
d. Related Cases
Ruling: Robbery with force upon things is punishable under Art 299 and
robbery with intimidation against the person is punishable under Art 294 (5).
Since both of the elements of Art 299 and Art 294(5) are present, the crime
committed is complex. It calls for the imposition of the penalty of the most
serious offense in its maximum period. Therefore, the penalty must be
imprisonment from from ten (10) years, and one (1) day of prision mayor to
nineteen (19) years, one (1) month and eleven (11) days of reclusion
temporal.
Ruling: The eight killings and the attempted murder were perpetrated by
means of different acts. Hence, they cannot be regarded as constituting a
complex crime under Art. 48 of the RPC which refers to cases where a
single act constitutes two or more grave felonies, or when an offense is
necessary means for committing the other.
Page 46 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
He conducted them to the New Bay View Hotel in the city where Bulaong
forced them to enter Room 304. He was still holding his gun with one hand
and with his other hand, he held Delena‘s arm. He threatened to kill the
two sisters if they would escape and refuse to enter the hotel room.
Bulaong raped the victims eight times.
Bulaong got convicted for 8 counts of rape.
Ruling: Yes. The trial court erred in imposing eight reclusion perpetuas.
Bulaong committed the continuing complex offense of forcible abduction
with rape
Ruling: When the incident resulting in several deaths and injuries was not a
product of malicious intent but rather the result of a single act of reckless
driving, the accused should be held guilty of the complex crime of reckless
imprudence resulting in multiple murders with serious physical injuries. If a
reckless, imprudent or negligent act results in two (2) or more grave or less
grave felonies, a complex crime is committed.
Page 47 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Ruling: Article 48 applies if a single act resulted to two or more grave and
less grave felonies or when an offense is necessary means of committing
another.
In the case at bar, the killing is not qualified by treachery because the
suddenness of the attack precede by altercation would not enable the
accused to adopt means to specifically ensure the execution of the crime
without risk coming from the intended victim. The crimes committed are
homicide and slight physical injuries. Considering that homicide is a grave
felony and slight physical injuries are light felonies, the acts produced does
not satisfy the definition of Art. 48.
The alleged falsification happened after the money was spent and to
explain how it was expended. Thus there is no complex crime since the
falsification is not necessary means for committing estafa (as charged) or
malversation (as suggested by Sandiganbayan). If at all, it was intended to
conceal the estafa or malversation.
Accused having been charged with two distinct crimes, acquittal in one,
will not necessary lead to acquittal in the other. Each crime will be
evaluated based on its own merits, and conviction will depend on the
proof of the elements of each particular offense. When a complex crime is
charged and the evidence fails to establish one of component offenses,
the defendant can be convicted of the others, so long as they are proved.
The Sales invoice was not established beyond reasonable doubt to have
been forged or falsified.
Page 48 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Under the aforecited article, when a single act constitutes two or more
grave or less grave felonies the penalty for the most serious crime shall be
imposed, the same to be applied in its maximum period irrespective of the
presence of modifying circumstances, including the generic aggravating
circumstances in this case. The maximum penalty of murder is death. The
trial court, therefore, correctly imposed the death penalty.
The underlying philosophy of complex crime in the RPC, which follows the
pro reo principle, is intended to favor the accused by imposing a single
penalty irrespective of the crimes committed. The accused who commits
two crimes with single impulse demonstrates lesser perversity than when
the crimes are committed by different acts and several criminal resolutions.
Continued Crime
- exists when there is plurality of acts over a period of times; unity of
penal provision violated and unity of criminal intent or purpose which means
two or more violations of the same penal provisions are united in one and
same intent or resolution leading to the perpetration of the same criminal
purpose.
A continuing crime is not a complex crime because the offender does
not perform a single act, but a series of acts and one offense is not a
necessary means of committing the other.
Page 49 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Ruling: Yes. There was only one crime committed in Santiago‘s case, and
hence, there should only be single information to be filed against her. The
signing of the release order of the 32 overstaying aliens arises from the
single intent or belief that there was no legal basis for their continued
detention.
Issue: Whether the crime stems from the single act of pressing the trigger.
Issue: Whether the crime stems from the single act of pressing the trigger.
Ruling: No. It is not the act of pressing the trigger which should be
considered as producing the several felonies, but the number of bullets
which actually produces them.
In the case at bar, Malanbanan heard three burst of gunfire from the two
armalites used by Corcolon and Peradillas. The accused are criminally
liable for as many offenses resulting from pressing the trigger.
Page 50 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Therefore, accused are liable for two counts of murder committed against
the victims, Nelson and Rickson Penalosa, instead of the complex crime of
double murder.
f. Reckless Imprudence
Ruling: No. There is no complex crime because the crime of slight physical
injuries and damage to property are light felonies. Accused must be
answerable separately for each offense committed.
g. Two-Tiered Penalties
A two tiered penalty is that which occurs when the law provides that a
penalty to a particular crime is in addition to the penalty imposable for
another crime which results from the commission of such particular crime.
It‘s an additional penalty usually for those who abuse authority.
Page 51 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
In the case at bar, rape can not be used to aggravate the penalty because
it was not proven. However, dwelling which is alleged in the information is
proven to aggravate the penalty, considering that the crime was committed
at the house of the victim.
Note:
The Special complex crime of rape with homicide is treated by law in
the same degree as qualified rape-that is, when any of the 7 (now 10)
―attendant circumstances enumerated in the law is alleged and proven, the
penalty is death, but in cases where any of those circumstances is proven
though not alleged, the penalty cannot be death except if the
circumstances under Art 14 and 15 of the RPC which will affect the imposition
of the proper penalty in accordance with Article 63 of the RPC.
Art 49 has reference to the provision in the 1 st par of Art 4 which provides that
criminal liability shall be incurred ―by any person committing a felony
although the wrongful act done be different from that which he intended‖
Art 49 applicable only in cases when there is a mistake in identity of the victim
of the crime and the penalty for the crime committed is different from that for
the crime intended to be committed.
Page 52 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Example: Juan only wanted to inflict a wound upon Pedro but because he
lost control of his right arm, he killed Pedro. Art 49 not applicable.
ART 49 ART 48
Lesser penalty to be imposed in its Penalty for the more serious crime shall be
maximum pd imposed in its maximum pd
Page 53 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Art.58 is limited only to grave and less grave felonies since it is not possible to
have accessories liable for light felonies. It is further limited to those whose
participation in the crime is characterized by the misuse of public office or
authority.
Page 54 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Basis for the imposition of proper penalty in impossible crimes: social danger
and degree of criminality shown by the offender.
7. Degrees – Article 61
Article 61. Rules for graduating penalties. — For the purpose of
graduating the penalties which, according to the provisions of Articles 50 to
57, inclusive, of this Code, are to be imposed upon persons guilty as
principals of any frustrated or attempted felony, or as accomplices or
accessories, the following rules shall be observed:
1. When the penalty prescribed for the felony is single and indivisible,
the penalty next lower in degrees shall be that immediately following that
indivisible penalty in the respective graduated scale prescribed in Article 71
of this Code.
5. When the law prescribes a penalty for a crime in some manner not
especially provided for in the four preceding rules, the courts, proceeding by
analogy, shall impose corresponding penalties upon those guilty as principals
of the frustrated felony, orof attempt to commit the same, and upon
accomplices and accessories.
The rules provided in this Art should also apply in determining the minimum of
the Indeterminate Sentence Law (ISL). It also applies in lowering the penalty
by one or two degrees by reason of the presence of the privileged mitigating
Page 55 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
circumstance or when the penalty is divisible and there are two or more
mitigating circumstances.
Divisible Penalties:
a) Reclusion Temporal
b) Prision Mayor
c) Prision Correccional
d) Arresto Mayor
e) Destierro
f) Arresto Menor
g) Public Censure
h) Fine
Rule No. 1:
When the penalty is single and indivisible (ex. RP), the penalty next
lower shall be reclusion temporal.
Rule No. 2:
a) when the penalty is composed of two indivisible penalties
Ex. penalty for parricide is reclusion perpetua to death, the next lower
penalty is reclusion temporal
Rule No. 3:
When the penalty is composed of 2 indivisible penalties and the
maximum period of a divisible penalty or when composed of one divisible
penalty the maximum of one divisible penalty
Ex. penalty for murder is reclusion temporal(max) to death. The point of
reference will be on the proper divisible penalty which is reclusion temporal.
Under the 3rd rule, the penalty next lower to reclusion temporal is composed
of the medium and minimum periods of reclusion temporal and the
maximum of prision mayor.
Rule No.4:
When the penalty is composed of several periods
Ex. the ―several‖ periods contemplated in this rule correspond to
different divisible penalties. A penalty of prision mayor in its medium
period to reclusion temporal in its minimum period is an example of such.
The penalty immediately following the minimum of the entire sentence,
which is prision mayor medium, is prision mayor in its minimum and the 2
periods next following, which are prision correccional max and medium.
Rule No.5:
When the penalty has only 2 periods
Page 56 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
8. Periods – Article 64
Article 64. Rules for the application of penalties which contain three
periods. — In cases in which the penalties prescribed by law contain three
periods, whether it be a single divisible penalty or composed of three
different penalties, each one of which forms a period in accordance with
the provisions of Articles 76 and 77, the court shall observe for the application
of the penalty the following rules, according to whether there are or are not
mitigating or aggravating circumstances:
7. Within the limits of each period, the court shall determine the
extent of the penalty according to the number and nature of the
aggravating and mitigating circumstances and the greater and lesser extent
of the evil produced by the crime.
COMPUTATIONS:
Page 57 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
10. Effect of Mitigating, Aggravating and Qualifying Circumstances – Articles 62, 63,
65, 66 and 67.
Page 58 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Page 59 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Par 4:the circumstances w/c consist of the ff shall serve to aggravate and
mitigate the liability only of those who had knowledge of them at the time of
the commission of the offense
a) material execution of the act
b) means employed to accomplish the crime
Page 60 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
bearing upon the criminal liability of all defendants who had knowledge thereof
at the time of the commission of the crime, or of their cooperation therein.
In the crime of murder, A hired B to kill C, to prevent the latter from being
a candidate for mayor in the May 11, 1998 elections. In the actual killing of C,
deliberately augmented the suffering of C chopping him into pieces and
scattering his remains in several places. The aggravating circumstances of
cruelty and outraging or scoffing at the person or corpse of C should be
appreciated only against B.
Par 5:Habitual Delinquent is a person who within the period of 10 years from
the date of his (last) release or last conviction of the crimes of:
a) serious or less serious physical injuries
b) robbery
c) theft
d) estafa
e) Falsification is found guilty of any of the said crimes a third time or
oftener.
Page 61 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Example:
With respect to the third conviction for robbery in March 1980, the ten-
year period is to be computed not from the date of last conviction for theft in
February, 1968 because that would be beyond the period provided by law, but
from the date of release of the accused in February, 1975, as the law provides
for the computation of the ten-year period in the alternative, either from the last
conviction or release. Apparently, in the example given, the last or third
conviction is more than ten years from 1968, but within ten years from release.
The period of ten years is therefore satisfied. The offender in the example given is
a habitual delinquent.
a) the law on habitual delinquency does not contemplate the exclusion from
the computation of prior conviction those falling outside the 10 yr period
immediately preceding the crime for w/c the defendant is being tried
Page 62 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
b) ten year period is counted not from the date of commission of the
subsequent offense but to the date of conviction thereof in relation to the
date of his last release or last conviction
d) convictions on the same day or at about the same time are considered as
one only (days, weeks..)
Notes:
o In no case shall be the total penalties imposed upon the offender exceed
30 years
o The law does not apply to crimes described in Art. 155(alarms and
scandals)
o The imposition of the additional penalties on habitual delinquents are
constitutional, it is simply a punishment on future crimes on account of the
criminal propensities of the accused.
o Habitual delinquency applies at any stage of the execution because
subjectively, the offender reveals the same degree of depravity or
perversity as the one who commits a consummated crime.
o Habitual delinquency applies to all participants because it reveals
persistence in them of the inclination to wrongdoing and of the perversity
of character that led them to commit the previous crime.
Page 63 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Article 66. Imposition of fines. — In imposing fines the courts may fix any
amount within the limits established by law; in fixing the amount in each case
attention shall be given, not only to the mitigating and aggravating
circumstances, but more particularly to the wealth or means of the culprit.
If these conditions are not all present, then the ff penalties shall be imposed:
a) grave felony – arresto mayor max to prision correccional min
b) less grave felony – arresto mayor min to arresto mayor med
Page 64 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Notes:
Art. 68 applies to such minor if his application for suspension of sentence is
disapproved or if while in the reformatory institution he becomes incorrigible
in which case he shall be returned to the court for the imposition of the
proper penalty.
a. PD 603
(1) Every child is endowed with the dignity and worth of a human being
from the moment of his conception, as generally accepted in medical
parlance, and has, therefore, the right to be born well.
(2) Every child has the right to a wholesome family life that will provide him
with love, care and understanding, guidance and counseling, and moral
and material security.
Page 65 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
(4) Every child has the right to a balanced diet, adequate clothing,
sufficient shelter, proper medical attention, and all the basic physical
requirements of a healthy and vigorous life.
(6) Every child has the right to an education commensurate with his
abilities and to the development of his skills for the improvement of his
capacity for service to himself and to his fellowmen.
(7) Every child has the right to full opportunities for safe and wholesome
recreation and activities, individual as well as social, for the wholesome use of
his leisure hours.
(8) Every child has the right to protection against exploitation, improper
influences, hazards, and other conditions or circumstances prejudicial to his
physical, mental, emotional, social and moral development.
(9) Every child has the right to live in a community and a society that can
offer him an environment free from pernicious influences and conducive to
the promotion of his health and the cultivation of his desirable traits and
attributes.
(10) Every child has the right to the care, assistance, and protection of the
State, particularly when his parents or guardians fail or are unable to provide
him with his fundamental needs for growth, development, and improvement.
(11) Every child has the right to an efficient and honest government that
will deepen his faith in democracy and inspire him with the morality of the
constituted authorities both in their public and private lives.
xxx
Page 66 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
A child nine years of age or under at the time of the offense shall be
exempt from criminal liability and shall be committed to the care of his or her
father or mother, or nearest relative or family friend in the discretion of the court
and subject to its supervision. The same shall be done for a child over nine years
and under fifteen years of age at the time of the commission of the offense,
unless he acted with discernment, in which case he shall be proceeded against
in accordance with Article 192.
xxx
b. RA 9344
xxx
SEC. 38. Automatic Suspension of Sentence. - Once the child who is under
eighteen (18) years of age at the time of the commission of the offense is found
guilty of the offense charged, the court shall determine and ascertain any civil
liability which may have resulted from the offense committed. However, instead
of pronouncing the judgment of conviction, the court shall place the child in
conflict with the law under suspended sentence, without need of application:
Provided, however, That suspension of sentence shall still be applied even if the
juvenile is already eighteen years (18) of age or more at the time of the
pronouncement of his/her guilt.
Page 67 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
c. Declarador vs. Hon. Gubaton, G.R. No. 1598208, August 18, 2006
Facts
Bansales was convicted of murder for killing his teacher (Declarador).
Bansales was 17 at the commission of the crime. The trial court suspended the
imposition of Bansales penalty and directed the accused to the
RegionalRehabilitaionCenter. Aggrieved by the decision; Declarador‘s party
filed an appeal.
Ruling
The SC judgment was in favor of Declarador. Based on the nature of the
crime charged and the impossible penalty not the penalty imposed by the trial
court. A person who is convicted of an offense punishable by death, life
imprisonment, or reclusion perpetua is disqualified from availing the benefits of a
suspended sentence.
If the convict were to suffer several penalties, the maximum duration of his
sentence shall not be more than three times the length of time corresponding to
the most severe penalty.
Example: A was sentenced to suffer four penalties; 6 years, 5 years, 5 years
and 7 years. The total of the penalties is 23 years. Applying the three fold rule,
multiply 7 by 3 and we have 21. A shall serve a total of 21 years only.
Under this rule, when a convict is to serve successive penalties, he will not
actually serve the penalties imposed by law. Instead, the most severe of the
penalties imposed on him shall be multiplied by three and the period will be the
only term of the penalty to be served by him. However, in no case should the
penalty exceed 40 years.
If the sentences would be served simultaneously, the Three-Fold rule does
not govern.
Although this rule is known as the Three-Fold rule, you cannot actually
apply this if the convict is to serve only three successive penalties. The Three-Fold
Rule can only be applied if the convict is to serve four or more sentences
successively.
The chronology of the penalties as provided in Article 70 of the Revised
Penal Code shall be followed.
It is in the service of the penalty, not in the imposition of the penalty, that
the Three-Fold rule is to be applied. The three-Fold rule will apply whether the
sentences are the product of one information in one court, whether the
sentences are promulgated in one day or whether the sentences are
promulgated by different courts on different days. What is material is that the
convict shall serve more than three successive sentences.
For purposes of the Three-Fold Rule, even perpetual penalties are taken
into account. So not only penalties with fixed duration, even penalties without
any fixed duration or indivisible penalties are taken into account. For purposes of
the Three-Fold rule, indivisible penalties are given equivalent of 30 years. If the
penalty is perpetual disqualification, it will be given and equivalent duration of
30 years, so that if he will have to suffer several perpetual disqualification, under
the Three-Fold rule, you take the most severe and multiply it by three. The Three-
Fold rule does not apply to the penalty prescribed but to the penalty imposed as
determined by the court.
Illustration:
Page 68 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Do not commit the mistake of applying the Three- Fold Rule in this case.
Never apply the Three-Fold rule when there are only three sentences. Even if you
add the penalties, you can never arrive at a sum higher than the product of the
most severe multiplied by three.
The common mistake is, if given a situation, whether the Three-Fold Rule
could be applied. If asked, if you were the judge, what penalty would you
impose, for purposes of imposing the penalty, the court is not at liberty to apply
the Three-Fold Rule, whatever the sum total of penalty for each crime
committed, even if it would amount to 1,000 years or more. It is only when the
convict is serving sentence that the prison authorities should determine how long
he should stay in jail.
This rule will apply only if sentences are to be served successively.
Page 69 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Ruling: Petitioner is mistaken in his application of the three-fold rule as set forth
in Article 70 of the Revised Penal Code. This article is to be taken into account
not in the imposition of the penalty but in connection with the service of the
sentence imposed. Article 70 speaks of "service" of sentence, "duration" of
penalty and penalty "to be inflicted". Nowhere in the article is anything
mentioned about the "imposition of penalty". It merely provides that the
prisoner cannot be made to serve more than three times the most severe of
these penalties the maximum of which is forty years.
The Sandiganbayan, therefore, did not commit any error in imposing
eight penalties for the eight informations filed against the accused-petitioner.
Even without the authority provided by Article 70, courts can still impose as
many penalties as there are separate and distinct offenses committed, since
for every individual crime committed, a corresponding penalty is prescribed
by law. Each single crime is an outrage against the State for which the latter,
thru the courts of justice, has the power to impose the appropriate penal
sanctions.
Page 70 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
The lower or higher penalty shall be taken from the graduated scale in
which is comprised the given penalty.
The courts, in applying such lower or higher penalty, shall observe the
following graduated scales:
SCALE NO. 1
1. Death,
2. Reclusion perpetua,
3. Reclusion temporal,
4. Prision mayor,
5. Prision correccional,
6. Arresto mayor,
7. Destierro,
8. Arresto menor,
9. Public censure,
10. Fine.
SCALE NO. 2
1. Perpetual absolute disqualification,
2. Temporal absolute disqualification
3. Suspension from public office, the right to vote and be
voted for, the right to follow a profession or calling,
4. Public censure,
5. Fine.
Article 72.Preference in the payment of the civil liabilities. — The civil liabilities
of a person found guilty of two or more offenses shall be satisfied by following
the chronological order of the dates of the judgments rendered against him,
beginning with the first in order of time.
If the decision or law says higher than RP or 2 degrees than RT, then the
penalty imposed is RP or RT as the case may be. Death must be designated
by name.However, for the other penalties, this does not apply.
Page 71 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Example: the penalty for crime X is 2 degrees lower than RP. The
penalty imposed is prision mayor.
The same rules shall be observed with regard of fines that do not
consist of a fixed amount, but are made proportional.
To get the lower degree:
Max: reduce by one-fourth
Min: the same
With respect to the penalty of fine, if the fine has to be lowered by degree
either because the felony committed is only attempted or frustrated or
because there is an accomplice or an accessory participation, the fine is
lowered by deducting 1/4 of the maximum amount of the fine from such
maximum without changing the minimum amount prescribed by law.
Illustration:
Page 72 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Page 73 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
PURPOSE
1. To prevent the unnecessary and excessive deprivation of liberty.
2. To enhance the economic usefulness of the accused since he may be
exempted from serving the entire sentence depending upon his behavior
and his physical, mental and moral record.
3. When the convict has served the maximum penalty he can be released on
parole by the bureau of pardons and parole.
Page 74 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
4. When the paroled convict violated any of the condition of the parole, he
can be rearrested to serve the maximum sentence.
Article 64. Rules for the application of penalties which contain three periods. - In cases
in which the penalties prescribed by law contain three periods, whether it be a single
divisible penalty or composed of three different penalties, each one of which forms a
period in accordance with the provisions of articles 76 and 77, the courts shall observe
for the application of the penalty the following rules, according to whether there are or
are no mitigating or aggravating circumstances:
1. When there are neither aggravating nor mitigating circumstances, they shall
impose the penalty prescribed by law in its medium period.
Page 75 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
4. When both mitigating and aggravating circumstances are present, the court
shall reasonably offset those of one class against the other according to their
relative weight.
7. Within the limits of each period, the courts shall determine the extent of the
penalty according to the number and nature of the aggravating and mitigating
circumstances and the greater or lesser extent of the evil produced by the
crime.
Article 65. Rule in cases in which the penalty is not composed of three periods. - In
cases in which the penalty prescribed by law is not composed of three periods, the
courts shall apply the rules contained in the foregoing articles, dividing into three equal
portions of time included in the penalty prescribed, and forming one period of each of
the three portions.
Article 66. Imposition of fines. - In imposing fines the courts may fix any amount within
the limits established by law; in fixing the amount in each case attention shall be given,
not only to the mitigating and aggravating circumstances, but more particularly to the
wealth or means of the culprit.
Article 67. Penalty to be imposed when not all the requisites of exemption of the fourth
circumstance of article 12 are present.- When all the conditions required in
circumstance number 4 of article 12 of this Code to exempt from criminal liability are
not present, the penalty of arresto mayor in its maximum period to prision correccional
in its minimum period shall be imposed upon the culprit if he shall have been guilty of a
grave felony, and arresto mayor in its minimum and medium periods, if of a less grave
felony.
Article 68. Penalty to be imposed upon a person under eighteen years of age. - When
the offender is a minor under eighteen years and his case is one coming under the
provisions of the paragraph next to the last of article 80 of this Code, the following rules
shall be observed:
1. Upon a person under fifteen but over nine years of age, who is not exempted
from liability by reason of the court having declared that he acted with
discernment, a discretionary penalty shall be imposed, but always lower by two
degrees at least than that prescribed by law for the crime which he committed.
2. Upon a person over fifteen and under eighteen years of age the penalty next
lower than that prescribed by law shall be imposed, but always in the proper
period.
Article 69. Penalty to be imposed when the crime committed is not wholly excusable. -
A penalty lower by one or two degrees than that prescribed by law shall be imposed if
the deed is not wholly excusable by reason of the lack of some of the conditions
required to justify the same or to exempt from criminal liability in the several cases
mentioned in article 11 and 12, provided that the majority of such conditions be
Page 76 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
present. The courts shall impose the penalty in the period which may be deemed
proper, in view of the number and nature of the conditions of exemption present or
lacking.
Article 70. Successive service of sentences. - When the culprit has to serve two or more
penalties, he shall serve them simultaneously if the nature of the penalties will so permit;
otherwise, the following rules shall be observed:
In the imposition of the penalties, the order of their respective severity shall be followed
so that they may be executed successively or as nearly as may be possible, should a
pardon have been granted as to the penalty or penalties first imposed, or should they
have been served out.
For the purpose of applying the provisions of the next preceding paragraph the
respective severity of the penalties shall be determined in accordance with the
following scale:
1. Death,
2. Reclusion perpetua,
3. Reclusion temporal,
4. Prision mayor,
5. Prision correccional,
6. Arresto mayor,
7. Arresto menor,
8. Destierro,
11. Suspension from public office, the right to vote and be voted for, the right to
follow a profession or calling, and
Notwithstanding the provisions of the rule next preceding, the maximum duration of the
convict's sentence shall not be more than threefold the length of time corresponding to
the most severe of the penalties imposed upon him. No other penalty to which he may
be liable shall be inflicted after the sum total of those imposed equals the same
maximum period.
In applying the provisions of this rule the duration of perpetual penalties (penal
perpetua) shall be computed at thirty years.(As amended by Com. Act No. 217.)
Article 71. Graduated scales. - In the cases in which the law prescribes a penalty lower
or higher by one or more degrees than another given penalty, the rules prescribed in
article 61 shall be observed in graduating such penalty.
Page 77 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
The lower or higher penalty shall be taken from the graduated scale in which is
comprised the given penalty.
The courts, in applying such lower or higher penalty, shall observe the following
graduated scales:
SCALE NO. 1
1. Death,
2. Reclusion perpetua,
3. Reclusion temporal,
4. Prision mayor,
5. Prision correccional,
6. Arresto mayor,
7. Destierro,
8. Arresto menor,
9. Public censure,
10. Fine.
SCALE NO. 2
3. Suspension from public office, the right to vote and be voted for, the right to
follow a profession or calling,
4. Public censure,
5. Fine.
Article 72. Preference in the payment of the civil liabilities. - The civil liabilities of a person
found guilty of two or more offenses shall be satisfied by following the chronological
order of the dates of the final judgments rendered against him, beginning with the first
in order of time.
SECTION 3
Page 78 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Article 74. Penalty higher than reclusion perpetua in certain cases. - In cases in which
the law prescribes a penalty higher than another given penalty, without specifically
designating the name of the former, if such higher penalty should be that of death, the
same penalty and the accessory penalties of article 40, shall be considered as the next
higher penalty.
Article 75. Increasing or reducing the penalty of fine by one or more degrees. -
Whenever it may be necessary to increase or reduce the penalty of fine by one or
more degrees, it shall be increased or reduced, respectively, for each degree, by one-
fourth of the maximum amount prescribed by law, without, however, changing the
minimum.
The same rules shall be observed with regard to fines that do not consist of a fixed
amount, but are made proportional.
Article 76. Legal period of duration of divisible penalties. - The legal period of duration
of divisible penalties shall be considered as divided into three parts, forming three
periods, the minimum, the medium, and the maximum in the manner shown in the
following table:
TABLE SHOWING THE DURATION OF DIVISIBLE PENALTIES AND THE TIME INCLUDED IN EACH
OF THEIR PERIODS
Article 77. When the penalty is a complex one composed of three distinct penalties. - In
cases in which the law prescribes a penalty composed of three distinct penalties, each
Page 79 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
one shall form a period; the lightest of them shall be the minimum, the next the
medium, and the most severe the maximum period.
Whenever the penalty prescribed does not have one of the forms specially provided for
in this Code, the periods shall be distributed, applying for analogy the prescribed rules.
RELATED CASES
CONTENTION OF STATE: The CFI of Camarines Sur found Formigones guilty of parricide
and sentenced him to reclusion perpetua pursuant to Art 246 of the RPC.
ISSUE: Whether or not Art. 64 (5) of the RPC is applicable in the case at bar.
RULING: Article 64 (5) is not applicable in the present case because this article is
applicable only to penalties which contain three periods. The penalty prescribed by
law for parricide is reclusion perpetua pursuant to Art. 246 of the RPC reclusion
perpetua is composed of only two indivisible penalties.
Facts: The judgment of conviction of appellant for murder and imposing upon him the
penalty of "cadena perpetua" (should be reclusion perpetua) of the Court of First
Instance of Negros Occidental in Criminal Case No. 9040, is appealed considering a lot
of factors.
Ruling: There can be no doubt, therefore, as to the guilt of appellant of the crime of
murder charged, qualified by "alevosia." However, he must be credited with mitigating
circumstance of voluntary surrender, for which reason, the Solicitor General
recommends that in lieu of the life imprisonment imposed by the trial court, the
appellant be sentenced to an indeterminate penalty of imprisonment ranging from
twelve years and one day of reclusion temporal, as minimum, to eighteen years, two
months and one day of reclusion temporal, as maximum. In this connection, in People
vs. Pantoja, 25 SCRA 468, it was held that "(t)he penalty for murder is reclusion
temporal in its maximum period to death. (Art. 248, Revised Penal Code.) There being
one mitigating circumstance, voluntary surrender, the penalty-should be reclusion
temporal in its maximum period in relation to the Indeterminate Sentence Law", and the
sentence actually imposed by the Court was the indeterminate penalty of from 16
years to 20 years of reclusion temporal.
We believe, however, that considering the (1) age of the appellant, as well as other
relevant factors in this case, such as (2) health, (3) mentality, heredity, and personal
habits, (4)conduct, environment, mode of life and criminal record, (5) education, both
Page 80 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
intellectual and moral, (6) proclivities and aptitudes with regard to the crime
committed, it would be more in keeping with the spirit and intent of the Indeterminate
Sentence Law, which is "to uplift and redeem valuable human material and prevent
unnecessary and excessive deprivation of personal liberty and economic usefulness."
CONTENTION OF STATE: That the trial court erred in imposing upon Viente a straight
penalty of imprisonment for 30 years.
ISSUE: Whether trial court erred in imposing Viente a straight penalty of imprisonment for
30 years.
RULING: We agree with the Solicitor General that the trial court erred in imposing upon
Viente a straight penalty of imprisonment for 30 years. The car napping in this case was
committed by means of violence against person. The penalty prescribed therefore
under sec. 14 of RA No. 6539 is imprisonment for not less than 17 years and 4 months
and more than 30 years under sec.1 of the Indeterminate Sentences Law, if an offence
is punished by special law, the court shall sentence the accused to an indeterminate
sentence the maximum term prescribed by the same. The proper penalty to be
imposed should not therefore, be 30 years but an indeterminate penalty which is
hereby at sentenced (17) years and (4) months as minimum (30) years as maximum.
Art. 63 of the RPC is the one applicable for this case because it refers to the application
of indivisible penalties whether it be a single divisible penalty, or two in-divisible
penalties like that of reclusion perpetua to death. Wherein it there are some mitigating
circumstances and no aggravating circumstance the lesser penalty shall be imposed.
Spouses JOSE and TRINIDAD BACAR complainants VS. JUDGE SALVADOR P. DE GUZMAN
Jr. respondent
FACTS: On 11 April 1994, petitioner-spouses Jose and Trinidad Bacar prayed for dismissal
the service of respondent Judge Salvador P. De Guzman Jr. presiding judge of the
Regional Trial Court of Makati Branch 142 on the ground of 1) gross ignorance of the
law and 2) rendering an unjust judgment in criminal cases nos. 89-1360 and 89-2878 for
homicide and attempted homicide respectively.
The court finds the accused Gerardo Marcial guilty of the crime of Homicide in
criminal for the death of one Maximo Bacar (the accused is hereby sentenced to an
indeterminate penalty of eight (8) years and one (1) day of prison mayor of fourteen
(14) years eight (8) months and one (1) day of reclusion temporal son of herein
petitioner-spouses and of the offense of Slight Physical Injuries for one Edgar Mabuyo (
to suffer imprisonment of thirty (30) days of arresto menor.) The accused is further
ordered to indemnity the heirs of the victim Maximo Bacar in the amount of P 50,000.00
as moral damages and to pay the amount of P 33, 572.00 as actual damages and cost
of suit.
Accused Gerardo Marcial filed motion for reconsideration of the joint judgment
which the lower court granted, as such they were given modification in consideration
to mitigating circumstances which reduced the penalty in Criminal case no. 89-1360 to
Page 81 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
six (6) years of prison mayor, while retaining the penalty in criminal case no. 89-2878 i.e
imprisonment of thirty (30) days of arresto menor.
ISSUE: Whether the imposition of a straight penalty of six years imprisonment on the
accused in his modified judgment in the case for homicide is contrary to Law.
RULING: The RTC Judge De Guzman is guilty of ignorance of the Law for imposing a
judgment of a straight penalty of six years imprisonment in his modified judgment.
The need for specifying the minimum and maximum periods of the indeterminate
sentence is prevent the unnecessary and excessive deprivation of liberty and to
enhance the economic usefulness of the accused, since he may be exempted from
serving the entire sentence depending upon his behavior and his physical, mental and
moral record. The requirement of imposing and indeterminate sentence in all criminal
offences whether punishable by the RPC or by special Laws with definite minimum and
maximum term, as the court deems proper within the legal range of the penalty
specified by the Law must, therefore be redeemed mandatory.
Ruling: The penalty for estafa depends on the amount defrauded. Article 315 of the
Revised Penal Code provides that "the penalty of prision correccional in its maximum
period to prision mayor in its minimum period (or imprisonment ranging from 4 years, 2
months and 1 day to 8 years), if the amount of the fraud is over P12,000.00 but does not
exceed P22,000.00 pesos, and if such amount exceeds the latter sum, the penalty
provided in this paragraph shall be imposed in its maximum period (6 years, 8 months
and 21 days to 8 years), adding one year for each additional P10,000.00 pesos; but the
total penalty which may be imposed shall not exceed twenty years. In such case, and
in connection with the accessory penalties which may be imposed and for the purpose
of the other provisions of this Code, the penalty shall be termed prision mayor or
reclusion temporal, as the case may be."
Inasmuch as the amount of P715,000.00 is P693,000.00 more than the
abovementioned benchmark of P22,000.00, then, adding one year for each additional
P10,000.00, the maximum period of 6 years, 8 months and 21 days to 8 years of prision
mayor minimum would be increased by 69 years, as computed by the trial court. But
the law categorically declares that the maximum penalty should be not more than 20
years. The maximum penalty then shall not exceed 20 years of reclusion temporal.
Under the Indeterminate Sentence Law, the minimum term of the indeterminate
penalty should be within the range of the penalty next lower in degree to that
prescribed by the Code for the offense committed, which is prision correccional.
Finding no error in the penalty proposed by the Solicitor General and imposed by the
respondent Court, we thus sustain it.
Page 82 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Facts: Petitioner and one Restituto Amistad were charged with the special complex
crime of robbery with homicide in Criminal Case No. TG-2450-95 filed in Branch 18 of the
Regional Trial Court in Tagaytay City, presided by respondent judge.
The trial court rendered an ―Order‖ on February 19, 1996, reciting the aforestated
antecedents, declaring both accused guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of
homicide, and sentencing each of them to a prison term of 14 years, 8 months and 1
day to 17 years, 4 months and 1 day of reclusion temporal,[1] and to severally pay the
civil liability.
Ruling: The sentence imposed by the trial court is erroneous. Felix Ladino and accused
Restituto Amistad are hereby SENTENCED to each serve an indeterminate penalty of
ten (10) years of prision mayor, as minimum, to seventeen (17) years and four (4) months
of reclusion temporal, as maximum.
FACTS: Appellants Felicisimo Narvasa and Jimmy Orania seek the reversal of the
October 11, 1996 Decision of the Regional Trial Court of Alaminos, Pangasinan, in
Criminal Case Nos. 2629-A, 2648-A and 2646-A, finding them guilty beyond reasonable
doubt of illegal possession of firearms in its aggravated form and sentencing them to
reclusion perpetua.
RULING: Under RA 8294, appellants can be held liable only for homicide and penalized
with reclusion temporal. Pursuant to Article 22 of the Revised Penal Code, RA 8294
should be given retroactive effect.
For the death of Primo Camba, Appellants Felicisimo Narvasa and Jimmy Orania are
found GUILTY of HOMICIDE with the special aggravating circumstance of using
unlicensed firearms. Applying the Indeterminate Sentence Law, they are each
sentenced to twelve (12) years of prision mayor, as minimum, to twenty (20) years
of reclusion temporal, as maximum; and ordered to pay the heirs of Primo Camba
P50,000 as death indemnity.
Page 83 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
sexually molested, thus raising the penalty from reclusion perpetua to death, to the
single indivisible penalty of
death (RA 7659 Sec II)
ISSUE: Whether or not the alleged touching is not sufficient to warrant his Conviction on
consummated rape rather on its attempted stage to Lessen his penalty.
RULING: The rape is on attempted stage the alleged touching is merely a stroked on the
external surface of the female organ and there must be sufficient and convincing
proof that the penis indeed touched the labia‘s or slid into the female organ for rape to
be consummated. The penalty for attempted is two (2) degrees lower than the
impossible penalty of death for the offence charged which is statutory rape of a minor
below (7) years. Two (2) degrees lower is reclusion temporal, applying the
indeterminate sentence. Law and in the absence of any mitigating or aggravating
circumstance, the maximum of the penalty to be imposed upon the accused shall be
taken from the maximum period of the reclusion temporal while the minimum shall be
taken from the medium period of the penalty next lower in degree, which is prison
mayor. Campuhan is sentenced to an indeterminate prison term of eight (8) years four
(4) months and (10) ten days of prison mayor medium As minimum to fourteen (14)
years (10) months and (20) days of reclusion temporal medium as maximum.
A. Execution of Penalties:
When there are two (2) or more penalties, the convict shall serve
them simultaneously if there nature so permits as in the following:
Page 84 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
a. Death
b. Reclusion Perpetua
c. Reclusion Temporal
d. Prision Mayor
e. Prision Correccional
f. Arresto Mayor
g. Arresto Menor
h. Destierro
i. Perpetual absolute disqualification
j. Temporary absolute disqualification
k. Suspension from public office, the right to be voted for the
right to follow profession or calling
l. Public Censure.
Art. 47. (In what cases the death penalty shall not be imposed).-
The death penalty shall be imposed in all cases in which it must be
imposed under existing laws, except in the following cases:
1. When the guilty person be more than seventy years of age.
2. When the guilty person is below 18 years of age at the time of the
commission of the crime.
3. When upon appeal or revision of the case by the Supreme Court,
the required majority vote is not obtained for the imposition of the
penalty.
In all three instances, the penalty shall be reclusion perpetua.
Page 85 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Art. 85. Provisions relative to the corpse of the person executed and
its burial. — Unless claimed by his family, the corpse of the culprit
shall, upon the completion of the legal proceedings subsequent to
the execution, be turned over to the institute of learning or
scientific research first applying for it, for the purpose of study and
investigation, provided that such institute shall take charge of the
decent burial of the remains. Otherwise, the Director of Prisons shall
order the burial of the body of the culprit at government expense,
granting permission to be present thereat to the members of the
family of the culprit and the friends of the latter. In no case shall the
burial of the body of a person sentenced to death be held with
pomp.
o In the Matter of the Petition for Habeas Corpus of Pete C. Lagran, (363 SCRA 275)
Subject Matter: Execution of Penalties
Facts: Sometime in April 1194, Pete C. Lagran was found guilty beyond
reasonable doubt by RTC of QC for three counts of violation of BP 22, and was
sentenced to suffer 1 year imprisonment for each count and to pay a fine of
Page 86 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
2.) Minors:
Page 87 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
the juvenile in conflict with the law. The court shall set the case for
disposition conference within fifteen (15) days from the
promulgation of sentence which shall be attended by the social
worker of the Family Court, the juvenile, and his parents or guardian
ad litem. It shall proceed to issue any or a combination of the
following disposition measures best suited to the rehabilitation and
welfare of the juvenile: care, guidance, and supervision orders;
Drug and alcohol treatment;
Participation in group counseling and similar activities;
Commitment to the YouthRehabilitationCenter of the DSWD or
other centers for juvenile in conflict with the law authorized by the
Secretary of the DSWD.
The Social Services and Counseling Division (SSCD) of the DSWD
shall monitor the compliance by the juvenile in conflict with the law
with the disposition measure and shall submit regularly to the Family
Court a status and progress report on the matter. The Family
Court may set a conference for the evaluation of such report in the
presence, if practicable, of the juvenile, his parents or guardian,
and other persons whose presence may be deemed necessary.
The benefits of suspended sentence shall not apply to a juvenile in
conflict with the law who has once enjoyed suspension of
sentence, or to one who is convicted of an offense punishable by
death, reclusion perpetua or life imprisonment, or when at the time
of promulgation of judgment the juvenile is already eighteen (18)
years of age or over.
Page 88 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Page 89 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Page 90 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Page 91 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
municipal judge and the charges have been ordered dropped, all
the records of the case shall be destroyed immediately thereafter.
Where a youthful offender has been charged and the court
acquits him, or dismisses the case or commits him to an institution
and subsequently releases him pursuant to this Chapter, all the
records of his case shall be destroyed immediately after such
acquittal, dismissal or release, unless civil liability has also been
imposed in the criminal action, in which case such records shall be
destroyed after satisfaction of such civil liability. The youthful
offender concerned shall not be held under any provision of law, to
be guilty of perjury or of concealment or misrepresentation by
reason of his failure to acknowledge the case or recite any fact
related thereto in response to any inquiry made of him for any
purpose.
"Records" within the meaning of this article shall include those
which may be in the files of the National Bureau of Investigation
and with any police department, or any other government agency
which may have been involved in the case.
Art. 201. Civil Liability of Youthful Offenders. - The civil liability for
acts committed by a youthful offender shall devolve upon the
offender's father and, in case of his death or incapacity, upon the
mother, or in case of her death or incapacity, upon the guardian.
Civil liability may also be voluntarily assumed by a relative or family
friend of the youthful offender.
Section 32 provides:
The sentence shall be suspended without need of application by the
juvenile in conflict with the law. The court shall set the case fro
disposition conference within 15 days from the promulgation of
sentence which shall be attended by the social worker of the Family
Page 92 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Section 38 of RA provides:
―Automatic Suspension of Sentence.- Once the child who is under
eighteen (18) years of age at the time of the commission of the
offense is found guilty of the offense charged, the court shall
determine and ascertain any civil liability which may have resulted
from the offense committed. However, instead of pronouncing the
judgment of conviction, the court shall place the child in conflict with
the law under suspended sentence, without need of application:
Provided, however, that suspension of sentence shall still be applied
even if the juvenile is already eighteen (18) years of age or more at the
time of the pronouncement of his/her guilt.‖
―Upon suspension of sentence and after considering the various
circumstances of the child, the court shall impose the appropriate
disposition measures as provided in the Supreme Court on Juveniles in
Conflict with the Law.‖
(RA 9344 merely amended Art. 192 of PD No. 603, as amended by A.M.
No. 02-1-18-SC)
Page 93 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
I. Total Extinction:
A. Extinction in General:
Art. 92. When and how penalties prescribe. — The penalties imposed
by final sentence prescribe as follows:
1. Death and reclusion perpetua, in twenty years;
2. Other afflictive penalties, in fifteen years;
Page 94 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
Page 95 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
principal penalty, the accessory penalties remain unless the same have been
expressly remitted by the pardon.
Page 96 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
law and procedural rules. Moreover, the death of Abungan would result in
the dismissal of the criminal case against him.
Thus, the criminal case against Pedro Abungan is dismissed and
appealed decision set aside.
Page 97 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
imprescriptible and that void contracts are not subject to ratification and/or
confirmation.
Issue: Whether or not the offense charged in complaint in violation of RA 3019
had already prescribed when the complaint was filed.
Held: Petition is granted. The office of Ombudsman should not have dismissed
the complaint on the basis of prescription which is erroneous. As a rule, if the
commission of the crime is known, the prescriptive period shall commence to
run on the day it was committed. However, in cases where the time of the
commission in unknown, prescription shall only run from its discovery and
institution of judicial proceedings for its investigation and punishment.
Ordinarily, there is no problem in determining the date when the crime
consists of a series of acts, especially when some or all these acts are
innocent in themselves.
Page 98 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
On January 14, 1985 the trial court rendered and declared the
petitioner guilty beyond reasonable doubt, and sentenced petitioner to
suffer the indeterminate penalty of imprisonment of 1 year as minimum to 3
years as maximum.
During the execution of judgment, petitioner failed to appear
which prompted the presiding judge to issue an order of arrest of petitioner
and the confiscation of his bond. However, petitioner was never
apprehended. He remained at large.
Ten years later, On October 24, 1997, petitioner filed before the trial
court a motion to quash the warrant issued for his arrest on the ground of
prescription of the penalty imposed upon him which was later denied.
Contention of the Accused: Petitioner maintains that Art. 93 of the RPC
provide that the period of prescription shall commence to run from the date
when the culprit should evade the service of his sentence. He further
contends that the judgment rendered on June 14, 1986 has prescribed on
October 24, 1996.
Contention of the Solicitor General: The Solicitor General pointed out the
meaning of ―escape‖ which means unlawful departure of prisoner from the
limits of his custody. As the petitioner has not been committed to prison he
cannot be said to have escaped there from.
Issue: Whether the penalty imposed upon the petitioner has prescribed.
Held:No. For the prescription by final sentence to commence to run, the
culprit should escape during the term of such imprisonment. The penalty
imposed has not prescribed because the circumstances of the case at
bench failed to satisfy the second element, to wit- ―That the convict evaded
the service of the sentence by escaping the service of his sentence.‖ As a
matter of fact, the petitioner never served a single minute of his sentence.
Petitioner was never brought to prison and even before the execution of the
judgment for his conviction, he was already hiding.
The elements in order that the penalty imposed has prescribed are
as follows:
1) That the penalty imposed by final sentence.
2) That the convict evaded the service of the sentence
by escaping during the term of his sentence.
3) That the convict who escaped from prison has not
given himself up, or been captured, or gone to a
foreign country with which we have no extradition
treaty or committed another crime.
4) That the penalty as prescribed, because of the lapse
of time from the date of the evasion of the service of
the sentence by the convict.
B. Particular Rules:
Page 99 of 134
UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS
COLLEGE OF LAW
CRIMINAL LAW II
ATTY. ISAGANI G. CALDERON
already after Palatino‘s election but prior to him assuming office. The
SC then held that since there is an absolute pardon, all the former
disabilities imposed and attached to the prior conviction had been
removed and that Palatino is therefore eligible for the public office in
question.
an action would fall on a Sunday, that day must be excluded from the
count and the action on the Saturday preceding the bar.
Issue: Whether or not a Sunday or legal holiday is a legal efficient
cause which interrupts the prescription of an offense.
Held: The SC ruled in favor of Yadiangco. Sec.31 of the RAC deals with
the computation of time allowed doing a particular act, such the filing
of tax returns, taking an appeal, filing an answer to a complaint, etc. It
does not apply to lengthen a period fixed by the state to prosecute an
offense against it. The waiver to prosecute such offender is automatic
and by operation of law. When the 60th or last day to file an
information falls on a Sunday or legal holiday, the 60-day period
cannot be extended to the next working day, prescription has
automatically set in.
The SC ruled that Rafael Yapdiangco‘s motion to quash is
granted and the information before the city court is dismissed.
Art. 97. Allowance for good conduct. – The good conduct of any
prisoner in any prisoner in any penal institution shall entitle him to the
following deductions from the period of his sentence:
1) During the first two years of his imprisonment, he shall be
allowed a deduction of five days for each month of good
behavior;
2) During the third to the fifth year, inclusive, of his imprisonment,
he shall be allowed a deduction of eight days for each month
of good behavior;
3) During the following years until the 10 th year inclusive of his
imprisonment, he shall be allowed a deduction of 10 days for
each month of good behavior; and
4) During the eleventh and successive years of his imprisonment,
he shall be allowed a deduction of 15 days for each month of
good behavior.
Purpose:
Promote the correction and rehabilitation of the accused.
Provide an opportunity for the reformation of an offender.
Prevent the commission of crimes.
Probation may be granted even if the penalty imposed is fine only but
with subsidiary imprisonment.
Procedure:
The convict must file before the trial court an application for
probation after he has been sentenced but before he begins to
serve the sentence. If the accused has been convicted and has
appealed the sentence of conviction, an application for probation
cannot be entertained. The prosecutor assigned to the court shall
be ordered to file his comments within 10 days from notice.
Probation may be granted only on application of the offender. The
court has no power to put him on probation motu proprio. The filing
of an application is, therefore, jurisdictional.
The court shall order the probation officer to conduct an
investigation of the offender if he is not disqualified.
The probation officer shall submit his investigation report within 60
days from receipt of the court order.
The court shall resolve the application within 15 days from receipt
of the report. It is discretionary with the court to grant or deny an
application for probation. The order granting or denying the
probation is not appealable.
The probationer order shall take effect upon its issuance.
Conditions of probation:
a) Mandatory or general- once violated, the probation is cancelled.
I. General Rule:
A. RPC Article 100.Civil liability of a person guilty of felony. - Every person criminally
liable for a felony is also civilly liable.
Issue: Does the death of an accused while his case is on appeal also extinguish his
civil liability?
Ruling: Yes. Upon death of the accused pending appeal of his conviction, the
criminal action is extinguished inasmuch as there is no longer a defendant to stand
as the accused; the civil action instituted therein for recovery of civil liability ex
delicto is ipso facto extinguished, grounded as it is on the criminal. Pursuant to RPC,
Art 89 1: How criminal liability is totally extinguished. -Criminal liability is totally
extinguished;
1. By the death of the convict, as to the personal penalties; and as to pecuniary
penalties, liability therefore is extinguished only when the death of the offender
occurs before final judgment;
it is incumbent upon the Court to dismiss the instant petition for review. Needless
to state, the civil liability attendant to the crime which includes the restitution of
personal or real property is also extinguished.
Facts: Remedios Sapiera was charged with estafa. She was acquitted of the crime
but the trial court did not rule on whether her civil liability amounting to 335 000 was
extinguished. On appeal, the CA ruled that she is civilly liable.
Ruling: No. Section 2, par. (b), of Rule 111 of the Rules of Court, as amended,
specifically provides: "Extinction of the penal action does not carry with it extinction
of the civil, unless the extinction proceeds from a declaration in a final judgment
that the fact from which the civil might arise did not exist.
The judgment of acquittal extinguishes the liability of the accused for damages only
when it includes a declaration that the fact from which the civil liability might arise
did not exist. Thus, the civil liability is not extinguished by acquittal where: (a) the
acquittal is based on reasonable doubt; (b) where the court expressly declares that
the liability of the accused is not criminal but only civil in nature; and, (c) where the
civil liability is not derived from or based on the criminal act of which the accused is
acquitted.
Contention of Judge Gerochi: As the prosecution failed to prove the guilt of the
accused beyond reasonable doubt, it follows that any obligation becomes civil in
nature and governed by civil laws.
Issue: In case of acquittal, is the civil liability arising from the acts complained of
extinguished?
Ruling: No. If an accused is acquitted, it does not necessarily follow that no civil
liability arising from the acts complained of may be awarded in the same judgment.
The prevailing rule as enunciated by this Court en banc in the case of Padilla v.
Court of Appeals (129 SCRA 558) is that the Court may acquit an accused on
reasonable doubt and still order payment of civil damages already proved in the
same case without need for a separate civil action.
Issue: If the information in the complaint is inconsistent with the act complained of,
does acquittal extinguish civil liability?
Ruling: *NO but the right to institute a separate civic action is reserved to the
offended party.
The trial court found as a fact that the sum of P1,200.00 ordered to be paid in the
judgment of acquittal was received by the defendant-appellant as loan. This finding
is inconsistent with the existence of the criminal act charged in the information. The
liability of the defendant for the return of the amount so received arises from a civil
contract, not from a criminal act, and may not be enforced in the criminal case.
In the present case, instead of a loan, the appellant retained the money because
of an arrangement with Mr. Mojica, heretofore mentioned.
Issue: Does a court lose jurisdiction over the civil aspect if the accused files his
appeal first before the prosecution files a motion to attach civil liability?
Ruling: No. The right of the injured persons in an offense to take part in its prosecution
and to appeal for purposes of the civil liability of the accused (section 107, General
Orders, No. 58), necessarily implies that such right is protected in the same manner
as the right of the accused to his defense. If the accused has the right within fifteen
days to appeal from the judgment of conviction, the offended party should have
the right within the same period to appeal from so much of the judgment as is
prejudicial to him, and his appeal should not be made dependent on that of the
accused. If upon appeal by the accused the court altogether loses its jurisdiction
over the cause, the offended party would be deprived of his right to appeal,
although fifteen days have not yet elapsed from the date of the judgment, if the
accused files his appeal before the expiration of said period.
*The offended party/prosecution may file an appeal on the civil aspect of a criminal
case, 15 days from the promulgation of decision by a lower court.
Issue: In case of acquittal where the act constituting a criminal offense has not been
duly proven,is civil liability extinguished?
Ruling: Yes. The extinction of the penal action does not carry with it the extinction of
the civil action. However, the civil action based on delict shall be deemed
extinguished if there is a finding in a final judgment in the civil action that the act or
omission from where the civil liability may arise does not exist.
Contention of Chua: Where from the nature of the offense or where the law defining
and punishing the offense charged does not provide for an indemnity, the offended
party may not intervene in the prosecution of the offense.
Issue: Are private prosecutors allowed to intervene when a case has been initially
filed and handled by a public prosecutor?
Ruling: Yes in relation to the civil liability. Generally, the basis of civil liability arising
from crime is the fundamental postulate that every man criminally liable is also civilly
liable.
Under the Rules, where the civil action for recovery of civil liability is instituted in the
criminal action pursuant to Rule 111, the offended party may intervene by counsel
in the prosecution of the offense. Rule 111(a) of the Rules of Criminal Procedure
provides that, [w]hen a criminal action is instituted, the civil action arising from the
offense charged shall be deemed instituted with the criminal action unless the
offended party waives the civil action, reserves the right to institute it separately, or
institutes the civil action prior to the criminal action.
Private respondent did not waive the civil action, nor did she reserve the right to
institute it separately, nor institute the civil action for damages arising from the
offense charged. Thus, we find that the private prosecutors can intervene in the trial
of the criminal action.
Issue: If during the pendency of an appeal an employee has jumped bail, is the
employer now civilly laible?
Ruling: Yes. Well-established in our jurisdiction is the principle that the appellate
court may, upon motion or motu proprio, dismiss an appeal during its pendency if
the accused jumps bail.The second paragraph of Section 8 of Rule 124 of the 2000
Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure provides:
The Court of Appeals may also, upon motion of the appellee or motu proprio,
dismiss the appeal if the appellant escapes from prison or confinement, jumps bail
or flees to a foreign country during the pendency of the appeal.
This rule is based on the rationale that appellants lose their standing in court when
they abscond. Unless they surrender or submit to the courts jurisdiction, they are
deemed to have waived their right to seek judicial relief.
B. Civil Code
Art. 20. Every person who, contrary to law, wilfully or negligently causes damage to
another, shall indemnify the latter for the same.
Art. 22. Every person who through an act of performance by another, or any other
means, acquires or comes into possession of something at the expense of the latter
without just or legal ground, shall return the same to him.
Art. 29. When the accused in a criminal prosecution is acquitted on the ground that
his guilt has not been proved beyond reasonable doubt, a civil action for damages
for the same act or omission may be instituted. Such action requires only a
preponderance of evidence. Upon motion of the defendant, the court may require
the plaintiff to file a bond to answer for damages in case the complaint should be
found to be malicious.
If in a criminal case the judgment of acquittal is based upon reasonable doubt, the
court shall so declare. In the absence of any declaration to that effect, it may be
inferred from the text of the decision whether or not the acquittal is due to that
ground.
Art. 31. When the civil action is based on an obligation not arising from the act or
omission complained of as a felony, such civil action may proceed independently
of the criminal proceedings and regardless of the result of the latter.
Art. 32. Any public officer or employee, or any private individual, who directly or
indirectly obstructs, defeats, violates or in any manner impedes or impairs any of the
following rights and liberties of another person shall be liable to the latter for
damages:
1) Freedom of religion;
2) Freedom of speech;
3) Freedom to write for the press or to maintain a periodical publication;
4) Freedom from arbitrary or illegal detention;
5) Freedom of suffrage;
6) The right against deprivation of property without due process of law;
7) The right to a just compensation when private property is taken for public use;
8) The right to the equal protection of the laws;
9) The right to be secure in one‘s person, house, papers, and effects against
unreasonable searches and seizures;
10) The liberty of abode and of changing the same;
11) The privacy of communication and correspondence;
12) The right to become a member of associations or societies for purposes not
contrary to law;
13) The right to take part in a peaceable assembly to petition the government for
redress of grievances;
14) The right to be free from involuntary servitude in any form;
15) The right of the accused against excessive bail;
16) The right of the accused to be heard by himself and counsel, to be informed
of the nature and cause of the accusation against him, to have a speedy
and public trial, to meet the witnesses face to face, and to have compulsory
process to secure the attendance of witness in his behalf;
17) Freedom from being compelled to be a witness against one‘s self, or from
being forced to confess guilt, or from being induced by a promise of
In any of the cases referred to in this article, whether or not the defendant‘s act or
omission constitutes a criminal offense, the aggrieved party has a right to commence
an entirely separate and distinct civil action for damages, and for other relief. Such civil
action shall proceed independently of any criminal prosecution (if the latter be
instituted), and mat be proved by a preponderance of evidence.
The indemnity shall include moral damages. Exemplary damages may also be
adjudicated.
The responsibility herein set forth is not demandable from a judge unless his act or
omission constitutes a violation of the Penal Code or other penal statute.
Article 101.Rules regarding civil liability in certain cases. - The exemption from
criminal liability established in subdivisions 1, 2, 3, 5 and 6 of article 12 and in subdivision
4 of article 11 of this Code does not include exemption from civil liability, which shall be
enforced subject to the following rules:
First. In cases of subdivisions 1, 2, and 3 of article 12, the civil liability for acts
committed by an imbecile or insane person, and by a person under nine years of age,
or by one over nine but under fifteen years of age, who has acted without discernment,
shall devolve upon those having such person under their legal authority or control,
unless it appears that there was no fault or negligence on their part.
Should there be no person having such insane, imbecile or minor under his authority,
legal guardianship, or control or if such person be insolvent, said insane, imbecile, or
minor shall respond with their own property, excepting property exempt from execution,
in accordance with the civil law.
Second. In cases falling within subdivision 4 of article 11, the persons for whose
benefit the harm has been prevented shall be civilly liable in proportion to the benefit
which they may have received.
The courts shall determine, in sound discretion, the proportionate amount for which
each one shall be liable.
When the respective shares cannot be equitably determined, even approximately,
or when the liability also attaches to the Government, or to the majority of the
inhabitants of the town, and, in all events, whenever the damage has been caused
with the consent of the authorities or their agents, indemnification shall be made in the
manner prescribed by special laws or regulations.
Third. In cases falling within subdivisions 5 and 6 of article 12, the persons using
violence or causing the fears shall be primarily liable and secondarily, or, if there be no
such persons, those doing the act shall be liable, saving always to the latter that part of
their property exempt from execution.
A. Insanity, Imbecility and those Over 9 and Under 15 Years of Age: RPC Art 101 first rule
1. Persons who have legal authority of the imbecile, insane or minor are primarily
liable.
2. Civil liability of minor who acts with discernment devolve upon the parents.
*Persons having legal authority of the imbecile, insane or minor are liable only if they are
negligent or with fault.
*The insane, imbecile or minor shall respond with their own property not exempt from
execution if there is no fault or negligence on the persons having legal authority over
such persons or those having legal authority are insolvent
C. Irresistible Force, Uncontrollable Fear of Greater or Equal Injury: RPC Art 101 third rule
- The persons using violence or causing the fear are primarily liable.
- If there be no such persons, those doing the act shall be liable secondarily
Article 103.Subsidiary civil liability of other persons. - The subsidiary liability established in
the next preceding article shall also apply to employers, teachers, persons, and
corporations engaged in any kind of industry for felonies committed by their servants,
pupils, workmen, apprentices, or employees in the discharge of their duties.
Contention of Carpio: It is implied that the subsidiary liability of the employer may be
enforced in the same proceeding and no separate action is necessary even if the
employer was not mentioned as a party in the criminal proceeding.
The present case is an action to enforce the civil liability arising from crime under Art.
103 of the RPC and not an action arising from culpa-contractual or culpa-aquiliana.
In order that an employer may be held subsidiarily liable for the employee's civil
liability in the criminal action, it should be shown (1) that the employer, etc. is
engaged in any kind of industry, (2) that the employee committed the offense in the
discharge of his duties and (3) that he is insolvent (Basa Marketing Corp. v. Bolinao,
117 SCRA 156). The subsidiary liability of the employer, however, arises only after
conviction of the employee in the criminal action. All these requisites present, the
employer becomes ipso facto subsidiarily liable upon the employee's conviction
and upon proof of the latter's insolvency
Ruling: No, therefore they are not subsidiarily liable for the negligent acts of nurses.
Nurses in treating a patient, are not acting as servants of the hospitals because they
are employed to carry out the orders of physicians, to whose authority they are
subject.
Article 104.What is included in civil liability. - The civil liability established in articles 100,
101, 102, and 103 of this Code includes:
1. Restitution;
2. Reparation of the damage caused;
3. Indemnification for consequential damages.
Article 105.Restitution. - How made. - The restitution of the thing itself must be made
whenever possible, with allowance for any deterioration, or diminution of value as
determined by the court.
The thing itself shall be restored, even though it be found in the possession of a third
person who has acquired it by lawful means, saving to the latter his action against the
proper person, who may be liable to him.
This provision is not applicable in cases in which the thing has been acquired by the
third person in the manner and under the requirements which, by law, bar an action for
its recovery.
Article 106.Reparation. - How made. - The court shall determine the amount of
damage, taking into consideration the price of the thing, whenever possible, and its
special sentimental value to the injured party, and reparation shall be made
accordingly.
X= Life Expectancy(LE) x gross annual income – living expenses (50% of gross annual
income)
Moral damages
- Automatically granted in:
1. Rape
2. Death
3. Detention
- Never punitive in nature and were never intended to enrich the claimant at the
expense of the defendant.
- Can be awarded without proof if it‘s obvious that physical suffering is present.
- Expenses relating to the 40th day and death anniversary cannot be considered
actual expenses because of lapse of time.
- Actual damages must be supported by receipts. An exception is for members of
indegenous community or Indegenous Persons (Mangyan, Ita, Igorot, etc.)
The heirs of the person liable has no obligation if restoration is not possible and the
deceased left no property.
Other kinds of damages: temperate and nominal damages may be awarded if the
court finds that some pecuniary loss was suffered by its amount cannot be proved with
certainty.
In cases of complex crimes where rape and death are present, the indemnity is 100
000 pesos while the moral damage is 50 000.
Issue: When a case on appeal has been dismissed for being in the wrong forum, is
the civil liability also lost?
Ruling: No. The case for acts of lasciviousness has not risen out of the same
occurrence or committed by the accused on the same occasion as that of the
crime of rape. What has been dismissed is only the appeal and the conviction of the
accused therein by the a quo stands.
5. People vs Panado
Facts: The accused, all surnamed Panados were found guilty of killing Danilo del
Rosario. They were ordered to pay the victim‘s heirs 50 000 for actual and
compensatory damages. The claim for damages has been based on Danilo‘s
widow‘s testimony.
Issue: Is it necessary to prove claims for moral, actual and compensatory damages
in cases of death?
Ruling: Yes for actual damages. Art. 2199 of the Civil Code explicitly requires that,
except as provided by law or by stipulation, one is entitled only to such pecuniary
loss as he has duly proved. In the instant case, aside from the assertion of the widow
that he spent P9,000.00 for the coffin of the deceased, no documentary evidence
was presented to prove that burial or funeral expenses were actually incurred.
However, from her own testimony she claimed that the receipt for the purchase of
the coffin was delivered to the Social Security System (SSS) to support her claim for
reimbursement. In fact, according to her, she was expecting to be reimbursed
P12,000.00 for her funeral expenses. The amount should more than make up for the
P9,000.00 she allegedly spent for the coffin of her husband. With regard to her other
funeral expenses, the widow failed to prove them with competent evidence.
Nonetheless, the heirs are entitled to damages for the loss of earning capacity of
the deceased Danilo del Rosario. The absence of documentary evidence to
support such claim does not preclude its recovery. The testimony of the victim‘s wife,
Hilda del Rosario, as to the earning capacity of her husband during his lifetime
sufficiently cures this deficiency.
Danilo del Rosario was thirty-seven (37) years old at the time of his death. His
average income as fishpond caretaker was P3,000.00 a month. Hence, in
accordance with the American Expectancy Table, the loss of earning capacity
must be computed as follows: 2/3 multiplied by (80 minus age of the deceased).
Since Danilo was 37 years of age at the time of his death, then his life expectancy
was 28.66 years. Thus - chanrobles virtual law library
Net Earning = Life x Gross - Reasonable &
Capacity (x) Expectancy Annual Necessary chanrobles virtual law library
Income Living Expenses chanrobles virtual law library
(x) = 2(80-37) x (P36,000 - P18,000)
3
(x) = 28.66 x P18,000 (x) = P 514,800.00
On the award of moral damages, this Court is convinced that the prosecution has
amply demonstrated that the heirs suffered mental anguish to justify this award.
Current jurisprudence has set moral damages at P50,000.00. Nonetheless, we deem
it proper to rethink our policy on moral damages.
Unlike in the crime of rape, we grant moral damages in murder or homicide only
when the heirs of the victim have alleged and proved mental suffering. However, as
borne out by human nature and experience, a violent death invariably and
necessarily brings about emotional pain and anguish on the part of the victims
family. It is inherently human to suffer sorrow, torment, pain and anger when a loved
one becomes the victim of a violent or brutal killing. Such violent death or brutal
killing not only steals from the family of the deceased his precious life, deprives
them forever of his love, affection and support, but often leaves them with the
gnawing feeling that an injustice has been done to them. For this reason, moral
damages must be awarded even in the absence of any allegation and proof of the
heirs' emotional suffering. Verily, Hilda and her son Louie Gee would forever carry
the emotional wounds of the vicious killing of a husband and a father. With or
without proof, this fact can never be denied; since it is undisputed, it must be
considered proved
Issue: In rape cases,may civil indemnity be awarded even if the judgment has no
pronouncement as to the civil liability?
Ruling: Yes. Civil indemnity must be mandatory upon the finding of the fact of rape.
Exemplary damages may also be awarded as part of the civil liability when the
crime was committed with one or more aggravating circumstances, as provided by
Art. 2230 of the Civil Code. Hence, in addition to the moral damages amounting to
P50,000.00, the victim should also be awarded civil indemnity in the amount of
P50,000.00 and exemplary damages in the amount of P20,000.00.
Contention of State: The victim‘s testified that they incurred 30 000.00 pesos as
actual damages for his brother‘s wake and funeral. The trial court failed to award
Issue: Is it necessary to increase the 30 000.00 pesos award for moral and exemplary
damages and to include consequential damages?
Ruling: Yes. The trial court‘s award of P50 000.00 as indemnity to the heirs of the
victim Romen Castro is in accord with our current rulings.
The award for exemplary damages should be deleted. Exemplary damages are not
awarded in the case at bar because the crime was committed without one or more
aggravating circumstances. As regards moral damages, the same should be
increased to P50 000 pursuant to recent rulings.
On the other hand, the trial court failed to award indemnification for consequential
damages which includes payment for loss of earning capacity.
In determining the loss for earning capacity the following formula is provided:
2 x [80-21 (age of the victim at time of death)] = 39.33
3
P150 (daily wage) x 261 (number of working days in a year) = P39,150.00
(gross annual salary)
39,150.00 x .50 (allocation for living expenses) = P19,575.00
39.33 x P19,575.00 = P769,884.75 (loss of earning capacity)
Hence, aside from the damages awarded by the trial court, accused-appellant
should pay the legal heirs of the victim the amount of P769,884.75 representing
unearned income of the victim.
Issues: Is there a need to present proof for claims on loss of earning capacity? Is
there a need to award a compensation for the value of thing destroyed, stolen, or
seized by an accused during the commission of a crime?
Ruling: Yes. The civil indemnity in the amount of P50,000.00 awarded by the trial
court is sustained, the same being in line with current case law. The award of
P26,000.00 as actual damages is also sustained as the amount duly proved and
supported by receipts presented during the course of the trial. However, the trial
court should have ordered accused-appellant to indemnify the heirs of the victim in
the amount of P15,000.00, representing the amount the victim was carrying at the
time of the crime and taken by accused-appellant and his co-accused. It was
never established by any admissible evidence that any portion of this amount had
been recovered.
But the award for loss of earning capacity should be disallowed. As a rule,
documentary evidence should be presented to substantiate the claim for damages
for lossof earning capacity. By way of exception, damages for loss of earning
capacity may be awarded despite the absence of documentary evidence,
provided that there is testimony either that the victim was self-employed earning
less than the minimum wage under current labor laws and judicial notice may be
taken of the fact that in the victim's line of work, no documentary evidence is
available; or that the victim was employed as a daily wage worker earning less than
the minimum wage under current labor laws. In the case at bar, the testimony of
Lea Espina, Winefred Espina's widow, was the sole basis for the award of damages
for loss of earning capacity. As it is not supported by other documentary evidence,
her bare testimony cannot be made the basis for an award of damages for loss of
earning capacity. Nor do the exceptions apply so as to justify an award of damages
for loss of earning capacity despite the absence of documentary evidence. The
victim was not employed as a daily wage worker earning less than the minimum
wage at the time of his death. He was in fact, as claimed by his widow, earning
substantially more than the minimum wage. For these reasons, damages for loss of
earnings cannot be awarded in the absence of evidence sufficiently showing his
income.
The trial court should have awarded moral damages in the amount of P50,000.00
pursuant to Art. 2219 par. (1) in relation to Art. 2006 par. (3) of the Civil Code. This is in
consonance with our recent rulings.
Article 109.Share of each person civilly liable. - If there are two or more persons civilly
liable for a felony, the courts shall determine the amount for which each must respond.
The subsidiary liability shall be enforced, first against the property of the principals; next,
against that of the accomplices, and, lastly, against that of the accessories.
Whenever the liability in solidum or the subsidiary liability has been enforced, the person
by whom payment has been made shall have a right of action against the others for
the amount of their respective shares.
Article 111.Obligation to make restitution in certain cases. - Any person who has
participated gratuitously in the proceeds of a felony shall be bound to make restitution
in an amount equivalent to the extent of such participation.
Art. 2202. In crimes and quasi-delicts, the defendant shall be liable for all damages
which are the natural and probable consequences of the act or omission complained
of. It is not necessary that such damages have been foreseen or could have
reasonably been foreseen by the defendant
Art. 2206. The amount of damages for death caused by a crime or quasi-delict shall be
at least three thousand pesos, even though there may have been mitigating
circumstances. In addition:
(1) The defendant shall be liable for the loss of the earning capacity of the
deceased, and the indemnity shall be paid to the heirs of the latter; such indemnity
shall in every case be assessed and awarded by the court, unless the deceased on
account of permanent physical disability not caused by the defendant, had no
earning capacity at the time of his death;
(2) If the deceased was obliged to give support according to the provisions of
Article 291, the recipient who is not an heir called to the decedent's inheritance by the
law of testate or intestate succession, may demand support from the person causing
the death, for a period not exceeding five years, the exact duration to be fixed by the
court;
(3) The spouse, legitimate and illegitimate descendants and ascendants of the
deceased may demand moral damages for mental anguish by reason of the death of
the deceased.
Art. 2230. In criminal offenses, exemplary damages as a part of the civil liability may
be imposed when the crime was committed with one or more aggravating
circumstances. Such damages are separate and distinct from fines and shall be paid to
the offended party.
RELATED CASES
People vs Bangcado and Banisa , GR. No. 132330, Nov 28, 2000
Facts: SPO1 JOSE BANGCADO and PO3 CESAR BANISA are policemen convicted of 2
counts of murder and 2 counts of frustrated murder. The victim is an ―Igorot‖, member
of an Indigenous Persons and during his burial, no receipts were taken or brought for
very few use receipts as proof of payments in Indigenous Persons Community. The
question now arises on the claim for actual damages.
Issue: On occasions where a victim was a member of Indigenous Persons and he was
buried according to customs and traditions, is documentary evidence such as receipts
necessary to substantiate claims for damages?
Ruling. No. The general rule is that claims for actual damages should be supported by
actual receipts. However, it is undisputed that the victims are members of the
indigenous community and were buried according to their customs and traditions. The
relatives of the victims attested that they incurred expenses for the cañao, the
traditional gathering of Igorots. The Court is not unaware that the informal market
system still governs the economic transactions of indigenous communities. Thus,
receipts and other documents do not play a large role in their daily commercial
transactions. In this case, wherein it is clearly established that the claimants were
indeed members of indigenous communities, then the court should allow reasonable
claims for expenses incurred in relation to traditional burial practices.
People vs Manalo 396 SCRA 159, G.R. Nos. 144989-90. January 31, 2003
Facts: Manalo was convicted of rape. The trial court awarded P50 000.00 as indemnity
to the victim and ordered the accused to pay the cost. No award for moral damages
was pronounced.
Ruling: Yes. The trial court should have further ordered him (accused) to pay P50,000 as
moral damages. Moral damages are automatically granted in a rape case without
need of further proof other than the fact of its commission. It is assumed that a rape
victim has actually suffered moral injuries entitling her to such an award.
People vs Rubiso, 399 SCRA 267, G.R. No. 128871. March 18, 2003
In this case, the ruling in in People vs Panado has been reiterated.
Facts: Rubiso was found guilty of murder. He was ordered to pay 106 288.85 as actual
damages and to the legal heirs of the deceased the amount of 50 000.00 for his
wrongful death, 30 000.00 as moral damages, and 560 000.00 for loss of earning
capacity and costs.
Ruling: Yes. We increase the trial courts award of moral damages from P30,000.00 to
P50,000.00 in line with current jurisprudence. The purpose of such award is not to enrich
the heirs of the victim but to compensate them for their wounded feelings. As borne out
by human nature and experience, a violent death, such as the one at bar, invariably
and necessarily brings about emotional pain and anguish on the part of the victims
family. It is inherently human to suffer sorrow, torment, pain and anger when a loved
one becomes the victim of a violent or brutal killing. Such violent death not only steals
from the family of the deceased his precious life, deprives them forever of his love,
affection and support, but often leaves them with the gnawing feeling that an injustice
has been done to them. For this reason, moral damages must be awarded even in the
absence of any allegation and proof of the heirs emotional suffering.
Issues: Is there a need to award civil indemnity in cases of rape? Are awards for civil
indemnities and moral damages one and the same?
Ruling. Yes and civil indemnity is separate and distinct from moral damages.
Civil indemnity must be awarded to complainant Aileen S. Alba. Civil indemnity, which
is mandatory in a finding of rape, is distinct from and should not be denominated as
moral damages which are based on different jural foundations and assessed by the
court in the exercise of sound discretion. In accordance with prevailing jurisprudence,
we grant civil indemnity of Fifty Thousand Pesos (P50,000.00) in each case.
Contention of Accused: The indemnity for Rape with Homicide being one crime must
be 50 000. Moral damages is unnecessary without proof of mental anguish and the likes.
Issues: In case of Rape with Homicide, is the civil indemnity of P100 000.00 too much? Is
it necessary to prove mental anguish and suffering before being awarded moral
damages?
Ruling: No. In line with the recent jurisprudence, the civil indemnity to be awarded to the
victim of rape with homicide is in the amount of P100,000.00 which is fully justified and
properly commensurate with the seriousness of the said special complex crime.
Ruling: The trial court awarded the heirs of the victim civil indemnity of P50,000.00. This
should be increased to P100,000.00 in accordance with the ruling in People v.
Payoti[45and People v. Robles, in which it was stated:
―With regard to the civil indemnity, the court hereby rules that the victim of rape with
homicide should be awarded the amount of P100,000.00. Prevailing judicial policy has
authorized the mandatory award of P50,000.00 in case of death, and P50,000.00 upon
the finding of the fact of rape. Also, under recent case law the indemnity for the victim
shall be in the increased amount of P75,000.00 if the crime of rape committed is
effectively qualified by any of the circumstances under which the death penalty is
authorized by the applicable amendatory laws [R.R. No. 4111 and R.A. No. 7659]; Thus,
if homicide is committed by reason or on occasion of the rape, indemnity in the
amount of P100,000.00 is fully justified and properly commensurate with the seriousness
of the said special complex crime.‖
An award of P50,000.00 for moral damages should likewise be made in favor of the heirs
of the victim in accordance with recent ruling of this Court
Issues: In cases where the accused in one crime are tried separately and the evidence
supporting claims for damages has been presented in the trial of one of the accused
but not in the trial of another, is the latter also liable for the civil liabilities of the former?
Ruling: No. In awarding in favor of the heirs of Roberto Raagas the amount of P140, 000
for burial expenses, the trial court relied on Exhibits A and A-1, which are merely lists of
expenses written on a PCIBank check booklet. It based the award for burial expenses in
the amount of P19,900 in favor of the heirs of Melencio Castro Jr. on Exhibits C (receipt
issued by Memorial Homes), D(list of expenses), and D-1(Affidavit of Adjudication).
Notably, these exhibits were presented during the trial of the cases against Laomoc on
14 December 1988 and 1 February 1989 before appellant Caraig was arrested. They
were not among the documentary evidence offered in evidence during the trial of the
consolidated cases against Caraig. Hence, they cannot be considered as evidence
against him.
Besides, a list of expenses cannot replace receipts when the latter should have been
issued as a matter of course in business transactions. Neither can the mere testimonies
of the victims widows Ruth Agustin, Rhodora Raagas, and Merle Castro in the
consolidated cases against Caraig justify the awards for funeral or burial expenses. It is
necessary for a party seeking the award of actual damages to produce competent
proof or the best evidence obtainable to justify such award.Only substantiated and
proven expenses, or those that appear to have been genuinely incurred in connection
with the death, wake, or burial of the victim will be recognized in court. Nonetheless, in
line with People v. Carillo, reiterated in People v.Bonifacio, we shall award nominal
damages in the amount of P10,000 for each group of heirs of the victims, since they
clearly incurred funeral expenses.
Issue: Are expenses for 4oth day and 1st year death anniversary included in actual
damages? Is testimonial evidence by the relative of a self-employed individual
sufficient to support claims for loss of income?
Ruling: Expenses for 40th day and 1st year death anniversary are not included in actual
damages. For loss of income, unbiased proof is required.
With regard the civil liability of the appellant, the award by the trial court of P50,000.00
as civil indemnity is in accord with recent jurisprudence. The widow of the victim is also
entitled to P50,000.00 as moral damages for the anguish she suffered for the sudden
death of her husband. As to the actual damages, it has been consistently ruled that the
party must produce competent proof or the best evidence obtainable to justify such
award. In People v. Judy Matore y Guevara, we held that a list of expenses cannot
replace receipts when the latter should have been issued as a matter of course in
business transactions. Thus, in the case at bar, the transportation and hospitalization
expenses which were not supported by receipts cannot be included in the
computation. Moreover, the expenses relating to the 40 th day and first year death
anniversary of Fernando cannot be considered as actual expenses because of the
lapse of a considerable time from his death. The award of P44,000.00 granted by the
trial court is therefore reduced to P27,040.00.
The widow, Esperanza, also testified that she lost a source of income for her family due
to the death of her husband, who she claimed had an annual income of P124,290.00
from farming and from the business of buying and selling of cows, carabaos, and pigs.
Of the P124,290.00, P81,600 or P6,800.00 per month comes from the business of buying
and selling of animals, while P42,690.00 comes from farming. In People v. Panabang, we
laid down the rule that for lost income to be recovered there must be an unbiased proof
of the deceased’s average, not just gross, income. Although in general, testimonial
evidence is insufficient to substantiate a claim for damages for loss of earning capacity,
testimonies of the relatives on the income of the deceased have been allowed to
prosper when documentary evidence is unavailable, such as when the deceased is
self-employed and the amount claimed is reasonable. Esperanza stated that her late
husband used to sell 3 cows, 2 carabaos and 10 pigs per month. However, it is of
judicial notice that the buy and sell of animals is a seasonal business. There are certain
months of the year when business is good, such as during the fiesta and Christmas
seasons. In the same manner, there are times when business is bad. In the exercise of
Contention of Accused: In line with prevailing jurisprudence, the award for moral
damages and exemplary damages must be reduced.
Issue: Is there a need to reduce the amount of moral damages and exemplary
damages when they exceed current jurisprudence?
Ruling: Yes. We sustain the court’s award of moral damages but at a reduced rate of
P50,000, consistent with recent jurisprudence. In cases of violent death, moral damages
is awarded even in the absence of proof because an untimely and violent death
invariably brings about emotional pain and anguish on the part of the victim‘s family. In
addition, the amount of P50,000 as indemnity for the death of Joseph should be
awarded to his heirs.
Finally, we note that the prosecution offered the testimony of the victim‘s widow on the
age and daily income of her husband, without supporting the same with documentary
evidence.
The rule is that documentary evidence should be presented to substantiate a claim for
damages for loss of earning capacity. By way of exception, damages therefore may
be awarded despite the absence of documentary evidence provided that there is
testimony that the victim was either (1) self-employed earning less than the minimum
wage under current labor laws, and judicial notice may be taken of the fact that in the
victim‘s line of work no documentary evidence is available; or (2) employed as a daily-
wage worker earning less than the minimum wage under current labor laws.
*not regularly employed/ ―umeextra extra lang‖- does not fall within the exception of
not presenting documentary evidence to substantiate claims for loss of income.
Contention of State: Damages must also be awarded to the victim and not just her
parents.
Ruling: The trial court awarded P100,000 moral damages to the spouses William and
Marymae Soriano, the parents of the victim. The trial court did not award any moral and
exemplary damages to the victim. The decision of the trial court has to be modified.
Under Article 2219, paragraph 7, of the New Civil Code, moral damages may be
awarded to a victim of illegal arrest and detention. In this case, the appellants poked a
knife on the victim as they took her from the school. The appellants also tied her hands,
and placed scotch tape on her mouth. The hapless victim was so shocked when
operatives of the PAOCTF barged into the office of appellant Bisda, and took custody of
the victim that she cried profusely. The victim suffered trauma, mental, physical and
psychological ordeal. There is, thus, sufficient basis for an award of moral damages in
the amount of P300,000.Since there were demands for ransom, not to mention the use
by the appellants of a vehicle to transport the victim from the school to the Jollibee
Restaurant and to the office of appellant Bisda, the victim is entitled to exemplary
damages in the amount of P100,000.
Ruling: Unlike in the crime of rape, we grant moral damages in murder or homicide only
when the heirs of the victim have alleged and proved mental suffering. However, as
borne out by human nature and experience, a violent death invariably and necessarily
brings about emotional pain and anguish on the part of the victims family. It is inherently
human to suffer sorrow, torment, pain and anger when a loved one becomes the
victim of a violent or brutal killing. Such violent death or brutal killing not only steals from
the family of the deceased his precious life, deprives them forever of his love, affection
and support, but often leaves them with the gnawing feeling that an injustice has been
done to them. For this reason, moral damages must be awarded even in the absence
of any allegation and proof of the heirs emotional suffering. Verily Hilda and her son
Louie Gee would forever carry the emotional wounds of the vicious killing of a husband
and a father. With or without proof, this fact can never be denied; since it is undisputed,
it must be considered proved
People vs Dogami
Facts: Alberto Dogami was found guilty of rape. No aggravating circumstance was
alleged in the information but during the trial, the circumstance of use of deadly
weapon was proven. The trial court did not award any exemplary damage but the CA
awarded P50 000.00 as exemplary damages on appeal.
Issue: In cases where an aggravating circumstance is not alleged in the information yet
it is duly proven during trial, will there be an award for exemplary damages?
Ruling: Yes. During the trial, the special aggravating circumstance of the use of a
weapon (handgun) and the aggravating circumstance of dwelling were proven.
Nonetheless, these aggravating circumstances cannot be considered in fixing the
penalty because the same were not alleged in the Information. Sections 8[140] and
9[141] of Rule 110 of the Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure now provide that
aggravating as well as qualifying circumstances must be alleged in the information;
otherwise, they cannot be considered against the accused even if proven during the
trial. Being favorable to the appellant, this rule, as amended, should be applied
retroactively to this case.
Article 112.Extinction of civil liability. - Civil liability established in articles 100, 101, 102,
and 103 of this Code shall be extinguished in the same manner as other obligations, in
accordance with the provisions of the Civil Law.
Article 113.Obligation to satisfy civil liability. - Except in case of extinction of his civil
liability as provided in the next preceding article, the offender shall continue to be
obliged to satisfy the civil liability resulting from the crime committed by him,
notwithstanding the fact that he has served his sentence consisting of deprivation of
liberty or other rights, or has not been required to serve the same by reason of amnesty,
pardon, commutation of sentence or any other reason.
Other causes:
1. Annulment
2. Recission
3. Fulfillment of resolutory condition