Alvarez Vs CFI

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case no.

648

Alvarez vs CFI
G.R. No. L-45358 | January 29, 1937
Petitioner: Narciso Alvarez
Respondents: Court of First Instance of Tayabas and The Anti-Usury Board

FACTS:

On June 13, 1936, the chief of the secret service of the Anti-Usury Board of the Department of
Justice, presented to Judge Eduardo Gutierrez David of the Court of First Instance of Tayabas, an
affidavit alleging that according to reliable information, petitioner kept in his house in Infanta, Tayabas,
books, documents, receipts, lists, chits and other papers used by him in connection with his activities as
a money-lender charging usurious rates of interest in violation of the law. In his oath at the and of the
affidavit, the chief of the secret service stated that his answers to the questions were correct to the best
of his personal knowledge. He did not swear to the truth of his statements upon his own knowledge of
the facts but upon the information received by him from a reliable informant. Upon the affidavit in
question, Judge David issued the warrant which is the subject matter of this petition, ordering the
search of the petitioner's house, the seizure of the books and documents and the immediate delivery to
him for disposal in accordance with the law.

With said warrant, several agents of the Anti-Usury Board entered the petitioner's store and
residence and seized and took possession of the following articles: internal revenue licenses for the
years 1933 to 1936, one ledger, two journals, two cashbooks, nine order books, four notebooks, four
checks stubs, two memorandums, three bankbooks, two contracts, four stubs, forty-eight stubs of
purchases of copra, two inventories, two bundles of bills of lading, one bundle of credit receipts, one
bundle of stubs of purchases of copra, two packages of correspondence, one receipt book belonging to
Luis Fernandez, fourteen bundles of invoices and other papers many documents and loan contracts with
security and promissory notes, 504 chits, promissory notes and stubs of used checks of the Hongkong
& Shanghai Banking Corporation. The search for and a seizure of said articles were made with the
opposition of the petitioner who stated his protest below the inventories on the ground that the agents
seized even the originals of the documents. The articles had not been brought immediately to the judge
who issued the search warrant. Because of this, the petitioner filed a motion praying that the agent
Emilio L. Siongco, or any other agent, be ordered immediately to deposit all the seized articles in the
office of the clerk of court and that said agent be declared guilty of contempt for having disobeyed the
order of the court.

ISSUE:

Whether or not the search warrant issued by the judge was invalid

RULING:

YES. Section 1, paragraph 3, of Article III of the Constitution requires that there be not only probable
cause upon the determination of the judge before the issuance of a search warrant but that the search
warrant must be based upon an application supported by oath of the applicant and the witnesses he may
produce. An oath must include any form of attestation by which a party signifies that he is bound in
Prepared by: Cheza Marie Biliran !1
case no. 648

conscience to perform an act faithfully and truthfully. The oath required must refer to the truth of the
facts within the personal knowledge of the petitioner or his witnesses, because the purpose is to
convince the judge of the existence of probable cause.

The Court ruled that the affidavit was insufficient. The sole basis for the issuance of the search
warrant was the affidavit of Agent Imelda. The judge should have looked at other affidavits. It is not
required by law that other affidavits be attached to one that is most important, it is only encouraged so
as to help the judge determine probable cause. If the affidavit of the applicant or complainant is
sufficient, the judge may dispense with the affidavits of other witnesses. In this particular case, the
affidavit used as basis was not sufficient because the facts that were stated were not based on personal
knowledge, but merely on hearsay. Because it is based on hearsay, it is necessary to call on other
witnesses to determine probable cause.

Prepared by: Cheza Marie Biliran !2

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