Antiporda v. Garchitorena Digest
Antiporda v. Garchitorena Digest
Antiporda v. Garchitorena Digest
LICERIO A. ANTIPORDA, JR., ELITERIO RUBIACO, VICTOR GASCON and CAESAR TALIA , petitioners,
vs. HON. FRANCIS E. GARCHITORENA, HON. EDILBERTO G. SANDOVAL, HON. CATALINO
CASTAÑEDA, JR. in their capacity as Presiding Justice and Associate Justices of the Sandiganbayan ,
respondents .
Case Principle:
Jurisdiction is the power with which courts are invested for administering justice, that is, for hearing
and deciding cases. In order for the court to have authority to dispose of the case on the merits, it
must acquire jurisdiction over the subject matter and the parties.
Facts:
All accused were charged with the crime of kidnapping and the same was filed with the
Sandiganbayan. At a later date, the court issued an order giving the prosecution thirty days to amend
the information which it complied further indicating thereon the office related character of the accused
and the same was admitted by the Sandiganbayan. Accused then filed a Motion to Quash the
Amended Information for lack of jurisdiction over the offense charged but it was denied by the
Sandiganbayan. Subsequently, accused filed a motion for reconsideration wherein it was alleged that
the filing of the Motion to Quash and the appearance of their counsel during the scheduled hearing
thereof amounted to their voluntary appearance and invested the court with jurisdiction over their
persons but the same was denied.
Issue:
W/O Sandiganbayan acquired jurisdiction by the order of amending the information to supply
jurisdictional facts not previously averred in the original information. (YES)
Ruling:
Jurisdiction is the power with which courts are invested for administering justice, that is, for hearing
and deciding cases. In order for the court to have authority to dispose of the case on the merits, it
must acquire jurisdiction over the subject matter and the parties.
The Sandiganbayan exercises not only civil but also criminal jurisdiction. Criminal jurisdiction is the
authority to hear and try a particular offense and impose the punishment for it. The case of Arula vs.
Espino enumerates the requirements wherein a court acquires jurisdiction to try a criminal case:
(1) the offense is one which the court is by law authorized to take cognizance of,
(2) the offense must have been committed within its territorial jurisdiction, and
(3) the person charged with the offense must have been brought in to its forum for trial, forcibly by
warrant of arrest or upon his voluntary submission to the court.
Herein petitioners question the assumption of jurisdiction by the Sandiganbayan over their case yet
they insist that said court acquired jurisdiction over their motion to quash. The petitioners cannot have
their cake and eat it too. And the court is in accord with the petitioners that when they filed a motion
to quash it was tantamount to a voluntary submission to the Court's authority hence acquiring
jurisdiction over the person of the accused.
On the other hand, the court explained that initially the Sandiganbayan did not acquire jurisdiction
over the offense charged since it was only after the original information was filed that the prosecution
belatedly remembered that a jurisdictional fact was omitted- offense committed is office related.
However, we hold that the petitioners are estopped from assailing the jurisdiction of the
Sandiganbayan for in the supplemental arguments to the motion for reconsideration and/or
reinvestigation filed with the same court, it was they who "challenged the jurisdiction of the Regional
Trial Court over the case and clearly stated in their Motion for Reconsideration that the said crime is
work-connected.
It is a well-settled rule that a party cannot invoke the jurisdiction of a court to secure affirmative relief
against his opponent, and after obtaining or failing to obtain such relief, repudiate or question that
same jurisdiction. We therefore hold that the Sandiganbayan has jurisdiction over the case because of
estoppel and it was thus vested with the authority to order the amendment of the Information.
Petition is denied.