Secretary vs. Lantion

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SECRETARY OF JUSTICE v.

LANTION
322 SCRA 160
FACTS:
The Department of Justice received from the Department of Foreign Affairs a
request from the United States for the extradition of Mark Jimenez to the United
States pursuant to PD No. 1609 prescribing the procedure for extradition of persons
who have committed a crime in a foreign country. Jimenez requested for copies of
the request and that he be given ample time to comment on the said request. The
petitioners denied the request pursuant to the RP-US Extradition Treaty.

ISSUE:
Whether or not treaty stipulations must take precedence over an individual’s due
process rights

HELD:
The human rights of person and the rights of the accused guaranteed in the
Constitution should take precedence over treaty rights claimed by a contracting
party, the doctrine of incorporation is applied whenever municipal tribunals are
confronted with a situation where there is a conflict between a rule of the
international law and the constitution. Efforts must first be made in order to
harmonize the provisions so as to give effect to both but if the conflict is
irreconcilable, the municipal law must be upheld. The fact that international law has
been made part of the law of the land does not pertain to or imply the primacy of
international law over municipal law in the municipal sphere. In states where the
constitution is the highest law of the land, both statutes and treaties may be
invalidated if they are in conflict with the constitution.

Secretary of Justice vs. Lantion, 322 SCRA 160 (2000)


FACTS: On June 18, 1999 the Department of Justice received from the Department of Foreign Affairs
a request for the extradition of private respondent Mark Jimenez to the U.S. The
Grand Jury Indictment, the warrant for his arrest, and other supporting documents for said extradition
were attached along with the request. Charges include:
1. Conspiracy to commit offense or to defraud the US
2. Attempt to evade or defeat tax
3. Fraud by wire, radio, or television
4. False statement or entries
5. Election contribution in name of another
The Department of Justice, through a designated panel proceeded with the technical evaluation and
assessment of the extradition treaty which they found having matters needed to be addressed.
Respondent, then requested for copies of all the documents included in the extradition request and for
him to be given ample time to assess it.
The Secretary of Justice denied request on the ff. grounds:
1. He found it premature to secure him copies prior to the completion of the evaluation. At that point in
time, the DOJ is in the process of evaluating whether the procedures and requirements under the
relevant law (PD 1069—Philippine Extradition Law) and treaty (RP-US Extradition Treaty) have been
complied with by the Requesting Government. Evaluation by the DOJ of the documents is not a
preliminary investigation like in criminal cases making the constitutionally guaranteed rights of the
accused in criminal prosecution inapplicable.
2. The U.S. requested for the prevention of unauthorized disclosure of the information in the
documents.
3. Finally, the country is bound to the Vienna convention on the law of treaties such that every treaty
in force is binding upon the parties.
The respondent filed for petition of mandamus, certiorari, and prohibition. The RTC of NCR ruled in
favor of the respondent. Secretary of Justice was made to issue a copy of the requested papers, as
well as conducting further proceedings.

ISSUES:
1. Whether or not private is respondent entitled to the two basic due process rights of notice and
hearing

RULING: Yes. Section 2(a) of PD 1086 defines extradition as “the removal of an accused from the
Philippines with the object of placing him at the disposal of foreign authorities to enable
the requesting state or government to hold him in connection with any criminal investigation directed
against him in connection with any criminal investigation directed against him or the execution of a
penalty imposed on him under the penal or criminal law of the requesting state or government.”
Although the inquisitorial power exercised by the Department of Justice as an administrative agency
due to the failure of the DFA to comply lacks any judicial discretion, it primarily sets the wheels for the
extradition process which may ultimately result in the deprivation of the liberty of the prospective
extradite. This deprivation can be effected at two stages: The provisional arrest of the prospective
extradite pending the submission of the request and the temporary arrest of the prospective extradite
during the pendency of the extradition petition in court. Clearly, there is an impending threat to a
prospective extraditee’s liberty as early as during the evaluation stage. Because of such
consequences, the evaluation process is akin to an administrative agency conducting an investigative
proceeding, the consequences of which are essentially criminal since such technical assessment sets
off or commences the procedure for and ultimately the deprivation of liberty of a prospective extradite.
In essence, therefore, the evaluation process partakes of the nature of a criminal investigation. There
are certain constitutional rights that are ordinarily available only in criminal prosecution. But the Court
has ruled in other cases that where the investigation of an administrative proceeding may result in
forfeiture of life, liberty, or property, the administrative proceedings are deemed criminal or penal, and
such forfeiture partakes the nature of a penalty. In the case at bar, similar to a preliminary
investigation, the evaluation stage of the extradition proceedings which may result in the filing of an
information against the respondent, can possibly lead to his arrest, and to the deprivation of his
liberty. Thus, the extraditee must be accorded due process rights of notice
and hearing according to Art. 3 sec 14(1) and (2), as well as Art. 3 sec 7—the right of the people to
information on matters of public concern and the corollary right to access to official records and
documents.

The court held that the evaluation process partakes of the nature of a criminal investigation, having
consequences which will result in deprivation of liberty of the prospective
extradite. A favorable action in an extradition request exposes a person to eventual extradition to a
foreign country, thus exhibiting the penal aspect of the process.

The evaluation process itself is like a preliminary investigation since both procedures may have the
same result – the arrest and imprisonment of the respondent. The basic rights of notice and hearing
are applicable in criminal, civil and administrative proceedings. Nonobservance
of these rights will invalidate the proceedings. Individuals are entitled to be notified of any pending
case affecting their interests, and upon notice, may claim the right
to appear therein and present their side.
Rights to notice and hearing: Dispensable in 3 cases:
a.When there is an urgent need for immediate action (preventive suspension in administrative
charges, padlocking filthy restaurants, cancellation of passport).
b.Where there is tentativeness of administrative action, and the respondent is not prevented from
enjoying the right to notice and hearing at a later time (summary distraint and levy of the property of a
delinquent taxpayer, replacement of an appointee)
c.Twin rights have been offered, but the right to exercise them had not been claimed.

2. Whether or not this entitlement constitutes a breach of the legal commitments and obligation of the
Philippine Government under the RP-US Treaty?

No. The U.S. and the Philippines share mutual concern about the suppression and punishment of
crime in their respective jurisdictions. Both states accord common due process protection to their
respective citizens. The administrative investigation doesn’t fall under the three exceptions to the due
process of notice and hearing in the Section 3 Rules 112 of the Rules of Court.

3. WON there is any conflict between private respondent’s basic due process rights and the
provisions of the RP-US Extradition treaty

RULING: No. Doctrine of incorporation under international law, as applied in most countries, decrees
that rules of international law are given equal standing with, but are not superior to national legislative
acts. Treaty can repeal statute and statute can repeal treaty. No conflict. Veil of secrecy is lifted during
trial. Request should impose veil at any stage.

Judgment: Petition dismissed for lack of merit.

Kapunan, separate concurring opinion:


While the evaluation process conducted by the DOJ is not exactly a preliminary investigation of
criminal cases, it is akin to a preliminary investigation because it involves the basic constitutional
rights of the person sought to be extradited. A person ordered extradited is arrested, forcibly taken
from his house, separated from his family and delivered to a foreign state. His rights of abode, to
privacy, liberty and pursuit of happiness are taken away from him—a fate as harsh and cruel as a
conviction of a criminal offense. For this reason, he is entitled to have access to the evidence against
him and the right to controvert them. Puno, dissenting: Case at bar does not involve guilt or innocence
of an accused but the interpretation of an extradition treaty where at stake if our government’s
international obligation to surrender to a foreign state a citizen of its own so he can be tried for an
alleged offense committed within that jurisdiction. Panganiban, dissenting: Instant petition refers only
to the evaluation stage.

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