People Vs Echegaray
People Vs Echegaray
People Vs Echegaray
RESOLUTION
PER CURIAM:
On June 25, 1996, we rendered our decision in the instant case affirming the conviction of the accused-
appellant for the crime of raping his ten-year old daughter. The crime having been committed sometime
in April, 1994, during which time Republic Act (R.A.) No. 7659, commonly known as the Death Penalty
Law, was already in effect, accused-appellant was inevitably meted out the supreme penalty of death.
On July 9, 1996, the accused-appellant timely filed a Motion for Reconsideration which focused on the
sinister motive of the victim's grandmother that precipitated the filing of the alleged false accusation of
rape against the accused. We find no substantial arguments on the said motion that can disturb our
verdict.
On August 6, 1996, accused-appellant discharged the defense counsel, Atty. Julian R. Vitug, and retained
the services of the Anti-Death Penalty Task Force of the Free Legal Assistance Group of the Philippines
(FLAG).
On August 23, 1996, we received the Supplemental Motion for Reconsideration prepared by the FLAG
on behalf of accused-appellant. The motion raises the following grounds for the reversal of the death
sentence:
"[1] Accused-appellant should not have been prosecuted since the pardon by the offended party and her
mother before the filing of the complaint acted as a bar to his criminal prosecution.
[2] The lack of a definite allegation of the date of the commission of the offense in the Complaint and
throughout trial prevented the accused-appellant from preparing an adequate defense.
[3] The guilt of the accused was not proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
[4] The Honorable Court erred in finding that the accused-appellant was the father or stepfather of the
complainant and in affirming the sentence of death against him on this basis.
[5] The trial court denied the accused-appellant of due process and manifested bias in the conduct of the
trial.
[6] The accused-appellant was denied his constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel and to
due process, due to the incompetence of counsel.
[7] R.A. [No.] 7659, reimposing the death penalty is unconstitutional per se:
a. For crimes where no death results from the offense, the death penalty is a severe and excessive
penalty in violation of Article III, Sec. 19 ( I ) of the 1987 Constitution.
b. The death penalty is cruel and unusual punishment in violation of Article III, Sec. 11 of the 1987
Constitution."
In sum, the Supplemental Motion for Reconsideration raises three (3) main issues: (1) mixed factual and
legal matters relating to the trial proceedings and findings; (2) alleged incompetence of accused-
appellant's former counsel; and (3) purely legal question of the constitutionality of R.A. No. 7659.
I.
It is a rudimentary principle of law that matters neither alleged in the pleadings nor raised during the
proceedings below cannot be ventilated for the first time on appeal before the Supreme Court.
Moreover, as we have stated in our Resolution in Manila Bay Club Corporation v. Court of Appeals:[1]
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"If well-recognized jurisprudence precludes raising an issue only for the first time on appeal proper, with
more reason should such issue be disallowed or disregarded when initially raised only in a motion for
reconsideration of the decision of the appellate court."
It is to be remembered that during the proceedings of the rape case against the accused-appellant before
the sala of then presiding Judge xxx, the defense attempted to prove that:
a) the rape case was motivated by greed, hence, a mere concoction of the alleged victim's maternal
grandmother;
c) the size of the penis of the accused cannot have possibly penetrated the alleged victim's private part;
and
d) the accused was in xxx during the time of the alleged rape.
In his Brief before us when the rape case was elevated for automatic review, the accused-appellant
reiterated as grounds for exculpation:
a) the ill-motive of the victim's maternal grandmother in prompting her grandchild to file the rape case;
b) the defense of denial relative to the size of his penis which could not have caused the healed hymenal
lacerations of the victim; and
Thus, a second hard look at the issues raised by the new counsel of the accused-appellant reveals that in
their messianic appeal for a reversal of our judgment of conviction, we are asked to consider for the first
time, by way of a Supplemental Motion for Reconsideration, the following matters:
a) the affidavit of desistance written by the victim which acted as a bar to the criminal prosecution for
rape against the accused-appellant;
b) the vagueness attributed to the date of the commission of the offense in the Complaint which
deprived the accused-appellant from adequately defending himself;
c) the failure of this Court to clearly establish the qualifying circumstance that placed the accused-
appellant within the coverage of the Death Penalty Law;
d) the denial of due process and the manifest bias exhibited by the trial court during the trial of the rape
case.
Apparently, after a careful scrutiny of the foregoing points for reconsideration, the only legitimate issue
that We can tackle relates to the Affidavit of Desistance which touches on the lack of jurisdiction of the
trial court to have proceeded with the prosecution of the accused-appellant considering that the issue of
jurisdiction over the subject matter may be raised at any time, even during appeal.[2]
It must be stressed that during the trial proceedings of the rape case against the accused-appellant, it
appeared that despite the admission made by the victim herself in open court that she had signed an
Affidavit of Desistance, she, nevertheless, "strongly pointed out that she is not withdrawing the charge
against the accused because the latter might do the same sexual assaults to other women."[3] Thus, this is
one occasion where an affidavit of desistance must be regarded with disfavor inasmuch as the victim, in
her tender age, manifested in court that she was pursuing the rape charges against the accused-appellant.
"As pointed out in People v. Lim (24 190 SCRA 706 [1990], which is also cited by the accused-
appellant, an affidavit of desistance is merely an additional ground to buttress the accused's defenses, not
the sole consideration that can result in acquittal. There must be other circumstances which, when
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coupled with the retraction or desistance, create doubts as to the truth of the testimony given by the
witnesses at the trial and accepted by the judge."[5]
In the case at bar, all that the accused-appellant offered as defenses mainly consisted of denial and alibi
which cannot outweigh the positive identification and convincing testimonies given by the prosecution.
Hence, the affidavit of desistance, which the victim herself intended to disregard as earlier discussed,
must have no bearing on the criminal prosecution against the accused-appellant, particularly on the trial
court's jurisdiction over the case.
II
The settled rule is that the client is bound by the negligence or mistakes of his counsel.[6] One of the
recognized exceptions to this rule is gross incompetency in a way that the defendant is highly prejudiced
and prevented, in effect, from having his day in court to defend himself.[7]
In the instant case, we believe that the former counsel of the accused-appellant to whom the FLAG
lawyers now impute incompetency had amply exercised the required ordinary diligence or that
reasonable decree of care and skill expected of him relative to his client's defense. As the rape case was
being tried on the merits, Atty. Vitug, from the time he was assigned to handle the case, dutifully
attended the hearings thereof. Moreover, he had seasonably submitted the Accused-Appellant's Brief
and the Motion for Reconsideration of our June 25, 1996 Decision with extensive discussion in support
of his line of defense. There is no indication of gross incompetency that could have resulted from a
failure to present any argument or any witness to defend his client. Neither has he acted haphazardly in
the preparation of his case against the prosecution evidence. The main reason for his failure to exculpate
his client, the accused-appellant, is the overwhelming evidence of the prosecution. The alleged errors
committed by the previous counsel as enumerated by the new counsel could not have overturned the
judgment of conviction against the accused-appellant.
III
Although its origins seem lost in obscurity, the imposition of death as punishment for violation of law or
custom, religious or secular, is an ancient practice. We do know that our forefathers killed to avenge
themselves and their kin and that initially, the criminal law was used to compensate for a wrong done to
a private party or his family, not to punish in the name of the state.
The dawning of civilization brought with it both the increasing sensitization throughout the later
generations against past barbarity and the institutionalization of state power under the rule of law. Today
every man or woman is both an individual person with inherent human rights recognized and protected
by the state and a citizen with the duty to serve the common weal and defend and preserve society.
One of the indispensable powers of the state is the power to secure society against threatened and actual
evil. Pursuant to this, the legislative arm of government enacts criminal laws that define and punish
illegal acts that may be committed by its own subjects, the executive agencies enforce these laws, and
the judiciary tries and sentences the criminals in accordance with these laws.
Although penologists, throughout history, have not stopped debating on the causes of criminal behavior
and the purposes of criminal punishment, our criminal laws have been perceived as relatively stable and
functional since the enforcement of the Revised Penal Code on January 1, 1932, this notwithstanding
occasional opposition to the death penalty provisions therein. The Revised Penal Code, as it was
originally promulgated, provided for the death penalty in specified crimes under specific circumstances.
As early as 1886, though, capital punishment had entered our legal system through the old Penal Code,
which was a modified version of the Spanish Penal Code of 1870.
The opposition to the death penalty uniformly took the form of a constitutional question of whether or
not the death penalty is a cruel, unjust, excessive or unusual punishment in violation of the constitutional
proscription against cruel and unusual punishments. We unchangingly answered this question in the
negative in the cases of Harden v. Director of Prison,[8] People v. Limaco,[9] People v. Camano,
[10] People v. Puda[11] and People v. Marcos,[12] In Harden, we ruled:
"The penalty complained of is neither cruel, unjust nor excessive. In Ex-parte Kemmler, 136 U.S., 436,
the United States Supreme Court said that 'punishments are cruel when they involve torture or a
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lingering death, but the punishment of death is not cruel, within the meaning of that word as used in the
constitution. It implies there something inhuman and barbarous, something more than the mere
extinguishment of life.'"[13]
Consequently, we have time and again emphasized that our courts are not the fora for a protracted debate
on the morality or propriety of the death sentence where the law itself provides therefor in specific and
well-defined criminal acts. Thus we had ruled in the 1951 case of Limaco that:
"x x x there are quite a number of people who honestly believe that the supreme penalty is either morally
wrong or unwise or ineffective. However, as long as that penalty remains in the statute books, and as
long as our criminal law provides for its imposition in certain cases, it is the duty of judicial officers to
respect and apply the law regardless of their private opinions,"[14]
Under the Revised Penal Code, death is the penalty for the crimes of treason, correspondence with the
enemy during times of war, qualified piracy, parricide, murder, infanticide, kidnapping, rape with
homicide or with the use of deadly weapon or by two or more persons resulting in insanity, robbery with
homicide, and arson resulting in death. The list of capital offenses lengthened as the legislature
responded to the emergencies of the times. In 1941, Commonwealth Act (C.A.) No. 616 added
espionage to the list. In the 1950s, at the height of the Huk rebellion, the government enacted Republic
Act (R.A.) No. 1700, otherwise known as the Anti-Subversion Law, which carried the death penalty for
leaders of the rebellion. From 1971 to 1972, more capital offenses were created by more laws, among
them, the Anti-Hijacking Law, the Dangerous Drugs Act, and the Anti-Carnapping Law. During martial
law, Presidential Decree (P.D.) No. 1866 was enacted penalizing with death, among others, crimes
involving homicide committed with an unlicensed firearm.
In the aftermath of the 1986 revolution that dismantled the Marcos regime and led to the nullification of
the 1973 Constitution, a Constitutional Commission was convened following appointments thereto by
Corazon Aquino who was catapulted to power by the people.
Tasked with formulating a charter that echoes the new found freedom of a rejuvenated people, the
Constitutional Commissioners grouped themselves into working committees among which is the Bill of
Rights Committee with Jose B. Laurel, Jr. As Chairman and Father Joaquin G. Bernas, S.J., as Vice-
Chairman.
On July 17, 1986, Father Bernas presented the committee draft of the proposed bill of rights to the rest
of the commission. What is now Article III, Section 19 (1) of the 1987 Constitution was first
denominated as Section 22 and was originally worded as follows:
"Excessive fines shall not be imposed, nor cruel, degrading or inhuman punishment, or the death penalty
inflicted. Death penalty already imposed shall be commuted to reclusion perpetua."
Father Bernas explained that the foregoing provision was the result of a consensus among the members
of the Bill of Rights Committee that the death penalty should be abolished. Having agreed to abolish the
death penalty, they proceeded to deliberate on how the abolition was to be done -- whether the abolition
should be done by the Constitution or by the legislature -- and the majority voted for a constitutional
abolition of the death penalty. Father Bernas explained:
"x x x [T]here was a division in the Committee not on whether the death penalty should be abolished or
not, but rather on whether the abolition should be done by the Constitution -- in which case it cannot be
restored by the legislature -- or left to the legislature. The majority voted for the constitutional abolition
of the death penalty. And the reason is that capital punishment is inhuman for the convict and his family
who are traumatized by the waiting, even if it is never carried out. There is no evidence that the death
penalty deterred deadly criminals, hence, life should not be destroyed just in the hope that other lives
might be saved. Assuming mastery over the life of another man is just too presumptuous for any man.
The fact that the death penalty as an institution has been there from time immemorial should not deter us
from reviewing it. Human life is more valuable than an institution intended precisely to serve human
life. So, basically, this is the summary of the reasons which were presented in support of the
constitutional abolition of the death penalty".[16]
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The original wording of Article III, Section 19 (1), however, did not survive the debate that it instigated.
Commissioner Napoleon G. Rama first pointed out that "never in our history has there been a higher
incidence of crime" and that "criminality was at its zenith during the last decade".[17] Ultimately, the
dissent defined itself to an unwillingness to absolutely excise the death penalty from our legal system
and leave society helpless in the face of a future upsurge of crimes or other similar emergencies. As
Commissioner Rustico F. de los Reyes, Jr. suggested, "although we abolish the death penalty in the
Constitution, we should afford some amount of flexibility to future legislation,"[18] and his concern was
amplified by the interpellatory remarks of Commissioner Lugum L. Commissioner and now Associate
Justice Florenz Regalado, Commissioner Crispino M. de Castro, Commissioner Ambrosio B. Padilla,
Commissioner Christian Monsod, Commissioner Francisco A. Rodrigo, and Commissioner Ricardo
Romulo. Commissioner Padilla put it succinctly in the following exchange with Commissioner
Teodoro C. Bacani:
"BISHOP BACANI. x x x At present, they explicitly make it clear that the church has never condemned
the right of the state to inflict capital punishment.
MR. PADILLA. x x x So it is granted that the state is not deprived of the right even from a moral
standpoint of imposing or prescribing capital punishment.
BISHOP BACANI. Yes. What I am saying is that from the Catholic point of view, that right of the state
is not forbidden.
MR. PADILLA. In fact x x x we have to accept that the state has the delegated authority from the
Creator to impose the death penalty under certain circumstances.
BISHOP BACANI. The state has the delegation from God for it to do what is needed for the sake of the
common good, but the issue at stake is whether or not under the present circumstances that will be for
the common good.
MR. PADILLA. But the delegated power of the state cannot be denied.
BISHOP BACANI. Yes, the state can be delegated by God at a particular stage in history, but it is not
clear whether or not that delegation is forever under all circumstances
MR. PADILLA. So this matter should be left to the legislature to determine, under certain specified
conditions or circumstances, whether the retention of the death penalty or its abolition would be for the
common good. I do not believe this Commission can a priori, and as was remarked within a few days or
even a month, determine a positive provision in the Constitution that would prohibit even the legislature
to prescribe the death penalty for the most heinous crimes, the most grievous offenses attended by many
qualifying and aggravating circumstances."[19]
What followed, thus, were proposed amendments to the beleaguered provision. The move to add the
phrase, "unless for compelling reasons involving heinous crimes, the national assembly provides for the
death penalty," came from Commissioners Monsod, Jose E. Suarez and de los Reyes. Commissioner
Rodrigo, however, expressed reservations even as regards the proposed amendment. He said:
"x x x [T]he issue here is whether or not we should provide this matter in the Constitution or leave it to
the discretion of our legislature. Arguments pro and con have been given x x x. But my stand is, we
should leave this to the discretion of the legislature.
The proposed amendment is halfhearted. It is awkward because we will, in effect, repeal by our
Constitution a piece of legislation and after repealing this piece of legislation, tell the legislature that we
have repealed the law and that the legislature can go ahead and enact it again. I think this is not worthy
of a constitutional body like ours. If we will leave the matter of the death penalty to the legislature, let
us leave it completely to the discretion of the legislature, but let us not have this half-baked provision.
We have many provisions in the Revised Penal Code imposing the death penalty. We will now revoke or
repeal these pieces of legislation by means of the Constitution, but at the same time say that it is up to
the legislature to impose this again.
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x x x The temper and condition of the times change x x x and so we, I think we should leave this matter
to the legislature to enact statutes depending on the changing needs of the times. Let us entrust this
completely to the legislature composed of representatives elected by the people.
I do not say that we are not competent. But we have to admit the fact that we are not elected by the
people and if we are going to entrust this to the legislature, let us not be half-baked nor half-hearted
about it. Let us entrust it to the legislature 100 percent."[20]
Nonetheless, the proposed amendment was approved with twenty-three (23) commissioners voting in
favor of the amendment and twelve (12) voting against it, followed by more revisions, hence the present
wording of Article III, Section 19 (1) of the 1987 Constitution in the following tenor:
"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 penalty already imposed shall be reduced to reclusion perpetua."
The implications of the foregoing provision on the effectivity of the death penalty provisions in the
Revised Penal Code and certain special criminal laws and the state of the scale of penalties thereunder,
were tremendous.
The immediate problem pertained to the applicable penalty for what used to be capital crimes. In People
v. Gavarra,[21] we stated that "in view of the abolition of the death penalty under Section 19, Article III
of the 1987 Constitution, the penalty that may be imposed for murder isreclusion temporal in its
maximum period to reclusion perpetua"[22] thereby eliminating death as the original maximum period.
The constitutional abolition of the death penalty, it seemed, limited the penalty for murder to only the
remaining periods, to wit, the minimum and the medium, which we then, in People v. Masangkay,
[23] People v. Atencio[24] and People v. Intino[25] divided into three new periods, to wit, the lower half of
reclusion temporal maximum as the minimum; the upper half of reclusion temporal maximum as the
medium; and reclusion perpetua as the maximum, in keeping with the three-grade scheme under the
Revised Penal Code. In People v. Munoz,[26] however, we reconsidered these aforecited cases and after
extended discussion, we concluded that the doctrine announced therein did not reflect the intention of
the framers. The crux of the issue was whether or not Article III, Section 19 (1) absolutely abolished the
death penalty, for if it did, then, the aforementioned new three-grade penalty should replace the old one
where the death penalty constituted the maximum period. But if no total abolition can be read from said
constitutional provision and the death penalty is only suspended, it cannot as yet be negated by the
institution of a new three-grade penalty premised on the total inexistence of the death penalty in our
statute books. We thus ruled in Munoz:
"The advocates of the Masangkay ruling argue that the Constitution abolished the death penalty and
thereby limited the penalty for murder to the remaining periods, to wit, the minimum and the medium.
These should now be divided into three new periods in keeping with the three-grade scheme intended by
the legislature. Those who disagree feel that Article III, Section 19 (1) merely prohibits the imposition
of the death penalty and has not, by reducing it toreclusion perpetua, also correspondingly reduced the
remaining penalties. These should be maintained intact.
A reading of Section 19 (1) of Article III will readily show that there is really nothing therein which
expressly declares the abolition of the death penalty. The provision merely says that the death penalty
shall not be imposed unless for compelling reasons involving heinous crimes the Congress hereafter
provides for it and, if already imposed, shall be reduced to reclusion perpetua. The language, while
rather awkward, is still plain enough".[27]
Nothing is more defining of the true content of Article III, Section 19 (1) of the 1987 Constitution than
the form in which the legislature took the initiative in re-imposing the death penalty.
The Senate never doubted its power as vested in it by the constitution, to enact legislation re-imposing
the death penalty for compelling reasons involving heinous crimes. Pursuant to this constitutional
mandate, the Senate proceeded to a two-step process consisting of: first, the decision, as a matter of
policy, to re-impose the death penalty or not; and second, the vote to pass on the third reading the bill re-
imposing the death penalty for compelling reasons involving heinous crimes.
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On February 15, 1993, after a fierce and fiery exchange of arguments for and against capital punishment,
the Members of the Senate voted on the policy issue of death penalty. The vote was explained, thus:
Upon motion of Senator Romulo, there being no objection, the Body suspended the Rules of the Senate.
Thereafter, upon motion of Senator Romulo, there being no objection, the Chair directed that a nominal
voting be conducted on the policy issue of death penalty.
Asked by Senator Tolentino on how the Members of the Senate would vote on this policy question,
Senator Romulo stated that a vote of Yes would mean a vote in favor of death as a penalty to be
reincorporated in the scale of penalties as provided in the Revised Penal Code, and a vote of No would
be a vote against the reincorporation of death penalty in the scale of penalties in the Revised Penal Code.
xxx
The Chair explained that it was agreed upon that the Body would first decide the question whether or not
death penalty should be reimposed, and thereafter, a seven-man committee would be formed to draft the
compromise bill in accordance with the result of the voting. If the Body decides in favor of the death
penalty, the Chair said that the committee would specify the crimes on which death penalty would be
imposed. It affirmed that a vote of Yes in the nominal voting would mean a vote in favor of death
penalty on at least one crime, and that certain refinements on how the penalty would be imposed would
be left to the discretion of the seven-man committee.
xxx
In reply to Senator Tañada's query, the Chair affirmed that even if a senator would vote 'yes' on the basic
policy issue, he could still vote 'no' on the imposition of the death penalty on a particular crime.
Senator Tolentino observed that the Body would be voting on the basic policy issue of whether or not
the death penalty would be included in the scale of penalties found in Article 27 of the Revised Penal
Code, so that if it is voted down, the Body would discontinue discussing Senate Bill No. 891 pursuant to
the Rules, but if approved, a special committee, as agreed upon in the caucus, is going to be appointed
and whatever course it will take will depend upon the mandate given to it by the Body later on.
Senator Roco stated that the Body would vote whether or not death as a penalty will be reincorporated in
the scale of penalties provided by the Revised Penal Code. However, he pointed out that if the Body
decides in favor of death penalty, the Body would still have to address two issues: 1) Is the crime for
which the death penalty is supposed to be imposed heinous pursuant to the constitutional mandate? 2)
And, if so, is there a compelling reason to impose the death penalty for it? The death penalty, he
stressed, cannot be imposed simply because the crime is heinous."[28]
With seventeen (17) affirmative votes and seven (7) negative votes and no abstention, the Chair declared
that the Senate has voted to re-incorporate death as a penalty in the scale of penalties as provided in the
Revised Penal Code. A nine-person committee was subsequently created to draft the compromise bill
pursuant to said vote. The mandate of the committee was to retain the death penalty, while the main
debate in the committee would be the determination of the crimes to be considered heinous.
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On March 17, 1993, Senator Arturo Tolentino, Chairman of the Special Committee on the Death Penalty,
delivered his Sponsorship Speech. He began with an explanation as to why the Senate Bill No. 891 re-
imposes the death penalty by amending the Revised Penal Code and other special penal laws and
includes provisions that do not define or punish crimes but serve purposes allied to the reimposition of
the death penalty. Senator Tolentino stated:
“x x x [W]hen the Senate approved the policy of reimposing the death penalty on heinous crimes and
delegated to the Special Committee the work of drafting a bill, a compromise bill that would be the
subject for future deliberations of this Body, the Committee had to consider that the death penalty was
imposed originally in the Revised Penal Code.
So, when the Constitution was approved in order to do away with the death penalty, unless Congress
should, for compelling reasons reimpose that penalty on heinous crimes, it was obvious that it was the
Revised Penal Code that was affected by that provision of the Constitution. The death penalty, as
provided in the Revised Penal Code, would be considered as having been repealed -- all provisions on
the death penalty would be considered as having been repealed by the Constitution, until Congress
should, for compelling reasons, reimpose such penalty on heinous crimes. Therefore, it was not only
one article but many articles of the Revised Penal Code that were actually affected by the Constitution.
And it is in consideration of this consequence of the constitutional provision that our Special Committee
had to consider the Revised Penal Code itself in making this compromise bill or text of the bill. That is
why, in the proposed draft now under consideration which we are sponsoring, the specific provisions of
the Revised Penal Code are actually either reenacted or amended or both. Because by the effect of the
Constitution, some provisions were totally repealed, and they had to be reenacted so that the provisions
could be retained. And some of them had to be amended because the Committee thought that
amendments were proper."[29]
In response to a query by Senator Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo as to whether or not it would have been
better if the Senate were to enact a special law which merely defined and imposed the death penalty for
heinous crimes, Senator Tolentino explicated, thus:
"x x x [T]hat may be a way presenting the bill. But we must bear in mind that the death penalty is
imposed in the Revised Penal Code. Therefore, when the Constitution abolished the death penalty, it
actually was amending the Revised Penal Code to such an extent that the Constitution provides that
where the death penalty has already been imposed but not yet carried out, then the penalty shall
be reclusion perpetua, that is the penalty in the Revised Penal Code. So we thought that it would be best
to just amend the provisions of the Revised Penal Code, restoring the death penalty for some crimes that
may be considered as heinous. That is why the bill is in this form amending the provisions of the
Revised Penal Code.
Of course, if some people want to present a special bill . . . the whole trouble is, when a special bill is
presented and we want to punish in the special bill the case of murder, for instance, we will have to
reproduce the provisions of the Revised Penal Code on murder in order to define the crime for which the
death penalty shall be imposed. Or if we want to impose the death penalty in the case of kidnapping
which is punished in the Revised Penal Code, we will do the same -- merely reproduce. Why will we do
that? So we just followed the simpler method of keeping the definition of the crime as the same and
merely adding some aggravating circumstances and reimposing the death penalty in these offenses
originally punished in the Revised Penal Code."[30]
From March 17, 1993, when the death penalty bill was presented for discussion until August 16, 1993,
the Members of the Senate debated on its provisions.
The stiffest opposition thereto was bannered by Senator Lina who kept prodding the sponsors of the bill
to state the compelling reason for each and every crime for which the supreme penalty of death was
sought. Zeroing in on the statement in the preamble of the death penalty bill that the same is warranted
in the face of "the alarming upsurge of [heinous] crimes", Senator Lina demanded for solid statistics
showing that in the case of each and every crime in the death penalty bill, there was a significantly
higher incidence of each crime after the suspension of the death penalty on February 2, 1987 when the
1987 Constitution was ratified by the majority of the Filipino people, than before such ratification.
[31]Inasmuch as the re-impositionists could not satisfy the abolitionists with sufficient statistical data for
the latter to accept the alarming upsurge of heinous crimes as a compelling reason justifying the
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reimposition of the death penalty, Senator Lina concluded that there were, in fact, no compelling reasons
therefor. In the alternative, Senator Lina argued that the compelling reason required by the constitution
was that "the State has done everything in its command so that it can be justified to use an inhuman
punishment called death penalty".[32] The problem, Senator Lina emphasized, was that even the re-
impositionists admit that there were still numerous reforms in the criminal justice system that may and
must be put in place, and so clearly, the recourse to the enactment of a death penalty bill was not in the
nature of a last resort, hence, unconstitutional in the absence of compelling reasons. As an initial
reaction to Senator Lina's contentions, Senator Tolentino explained that the statement in the preamble is
a general one and refers to all the crimes covered by the bill and not to specific crimes. He added that
one crime may not have the same degree of increase in incidence as the other crimes and that the public
demand to impose the death penalty is enough compelling reason.[33]
Equally fit to the task was Senator Wigberto Tañada to whom the battle lines were clearly drawn. He
put to issue two things: first, the definition of "heinous crimes" as provided for in the death penalty bill;
and second, the statement of compelling reasons for each and every capital crime. His interpellation of
Senator Tolentino clearly showed his objections to the bill:
"Senator Tañada. x x x But what would make crimes heinous, Mr. President? Are crimes heinous by
their nature or elements as they are described in the bill or are crimes heinous because they are punished
by death, as bribery and malversation are proposed to be punished in the bill?
Senator Tolentino. They are heinous by their nature, Mr. President, but that is not supposed to be the
exclusive criterion. The nature of the offense is the most important element in considering it heinous
but, at the same time, we should consider the relation of the offense to society in order to have a
complete idea of the heinous nature of these offenses.
In the case of malversation or bribery, for instance, these offenses by themselves connected with the
effect upon society and the government have made them fall under the classification of heinous crimes.
The compelling reason for imposing the death penalty is when the offenses of malversation and bribery
becomes so grave and so serious as indicated in the substitute bill itself, then there is a compelling
reason for the death penalty.
Senator Tañada. With respect to the compelling reasons, Mr. President, does the Gentleman believe
that these compelling reasons, which would call for the reimposition of the death penalty, should be
separately, distinctly and clearly stated for each crime so that it will be very clear to one and all that not
only are these crimes heinous but also one can see the compelling reasons for the reimposition of the
death penalty therefor?
Senator Tolentino. Mr. President, that matter was actually considered by the Committee. But the
decision of the Committee was to avoid stating the compelling reason for each and every offense that is
included in the substitute measure. That is why in the preamble, general statements were made to show
these compelling reasons. And that, we believe, included in the bill, when converted into law, would be
sufficient notice as to what were considered compelling reasons by the Congress, in providing the death
penalty for these different offenses.
If a matter like this is questioned before the Supreme Court, I would suppose that with the preamble
already in general terms, the Supreme Court would feel that it was the sense of Congress that this
preamble would be applicable to each and every offense described or punishable in the measure.
So we felt that it was not necessary to repeat these compelling reasons for each and every offense.
Senator Tañada. Mr. President, I am thinking about the constitutional limitations upon the power of
Congress to enact criminal legislation, especially the provisions on the Bill of Rights, particularly the
one which says that no person shall be held to answer for a criminal offense without due process of law.
Can we not say that under this provision, it is required that the compelling reasons be so stated in the bill
so that the bill, when it becomes a law, will clearly define the acts and the omissions punished as
crimes?
Senator Tolentino. Mr. President, I believe that in itself, as substantive law, this is sufficient. The
question of whether there is due process will more or less be a matter of procedure in the compliance
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with the requirements of the Constitution with respect to due process itself which is a separate matter
from the substantive law as to the definition and penalty for crimes.
Senator Tañada. Under the Constitution, Mr. President, it appears that the reimposition of the death
penalty is subject to three conditions and these are:
Under these provision of the Constitution, paragraph 1, Section 13, does the distinguished Gentleman
not feel that Congress is bound to state clearly the compelling reasons for the reimposition of the death
penalty for each crime, as well as the elements that make each of the crimes heinous included in the bill?
Senator Tolentino. Mr. President, that is a matter of opinion already. I believe that whether we state
the compelling reasons or not, whether we state why a certain offense is heinous, is not very important.
If the question is raised in the Supreme Court, it is not what we say in the bill that will be controlling but
what the Supreme Court will fell as a sufficient compelling reason or as to the heinous nature whether
the crime is heinous or not. The accused can certainly raise the matter of constitutionality but it will not
go into the matter of due process. It will go into the very power of Congress to enact a bill imposing the
death penalty. So that would be entirely separate from the matter of due process." [34]
Senator Francisco Tatad, on his part, pointed out that the death penalty bill violated our international
commitment in support of the worldwide abolition of capital punishment, the Philippines being a
signatory to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and its Second Optional Protocol.
Senator Ernesto Herrera clarified, however, that in the United Nations, subject matters are submitted to
the different committees which vote on them for consideration in the plenary session. He stressed that
unless approved in the plenary session, a declaration would have no binding effect on signatory
countries. In this respect, the Philippines cannot be deemed irrevocably bound by said covenant and
protocol considering that these agreements have reached only the committee level.[35]
After the protracted debate, the Members of the Senate voted on Senate Bill No. 891 on third reading.
With seventeen (17) affirmative votes, four (4) negative votes, and one abstention, the death penalty bill
was approved on third reading on August 16, 1993.
The Senate's vote to pass Senate Bill No. 891 on third reading on August 16, 1993 was a vindication of,
the House of Representatives. The House had, in the Eight Congress, earlier approved on third reading
House Bill No. 295 on the restoration of the death penalty for certain heinous crimes. The House was in
effect rebuffed by the Senate when the Senate killed House Bill No. 295 along with other bills coming
from the House. House Bill No. 295 was resurrected during the Ninth Congress in the form of House
Bill No. 62 which was introduced by twenty one (21) Members of the House of Representatives on
October 27, 1992. House Bill No. 62 was a merger of House Bill Nos. 125, 187, 411, 764, 506, 781,
955, 1565, 1586, 2206, 3238, 3576 and 3632 authored by various Members of the Lower House.
In his Sponsorship Speech, Representative Manuel R. Sanchez of Rizal ably essayed the constitutional
vesting in Congress of the power to re-impose the death penalty for compelling reasons invoking
heinous crimes as well as the nature of this constitutional pre-requisite to the exercise of such power.
'Neither shall death penalty be imposed, unless, for compelling reasons involving heinous crimes, the
Congress shall thereafter provide for it . . .'
The phrase 'unless, for compelling reasons involving heinous crimes, the Congress shall thereafter
provide for it was introduced as an amendment by then Comm. Christian Monsod.
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The import of this amendment is unmistakable. By this amendment, the death penalty was not
completely abolished by the 1987 Constitution. Rather, it merely suspended the death penalty and gave
Congress the discretion to review it at the propitious time.
Arguing for the inclusion of said amendment in the fine provision, Comm. Ricardo Romulo said, and I
quote:
"'The people should have the final say on the subject, because, at some future time, the people might
want to restore death penalty through initiative and referendum.
We cannot presume to have the wisdom of the ages. Therefore, it is entirely possible in the future that
circumstances may arise which we should not preclude today.
I believe that [there] are enough compelling reasons that merit the reimposition of the capital
punishment. The violent manner and the viciousness in which crimes are now committed with alarming
regularity, show very clearly a patent disregard of the law and a mockery of public peace and order.
In the public gallery section today are the relatives of the victims of heinous crimes — the Hultmans, the
Maguans, the Vizcondes, the Castanoses, and many more, and they are all crying for justice. We ought
to listen to them because their lives, their hopes, their dreams, their future have fallen asunder by the
cruel and vicious criminality of a few who put their selfish interest above that of society.
Heinous crime is an act or series of acts which, by the flagrantly violent manner in which the same was
committed or by the reason of its inherent viciousness, shows a patent disregard and mockery of the law,
public peace and order, or public morals. It is an offense whose essential and inherent viciousness and
atrocity are repugnant and outrageous to a civilized society and hence, shock the moral self of a people.
The Vizconde massacre that took the lives of a mother and her two lovely daughters, will stand in the
people's memory for many long years as the epitome of viciousness and atrocity that are repugnant to
civilized society.
The senseless murder of Eldon Maguan, and up-and-coming young business executive, was and still is
an outrage that shocks the moral self of our people.
The mind-boggling death of Maureen Hultmann, a comely 16 year-old high school student who dreamt
of becoming a commercial model someday, at the hands of a crazed man was so repulsive, so brutal that
it offends the sensibilities of Christians and non-Christians alike
The cold-blooded double murder of Cochise Bernabe and Beebom Castanos, the lovely and promising
couple from the University of the Philippines, is eternally lodged in the recesses of our minds and still
makes our stomach turn in utter disgust.
The seriousness of the situation is such that if no radical action is taken by this body in restoring death
penalty as a positive response to the overwhelming clamor of the people, then, as Professor Esteban
Bautista of the Philippine Law Center said, and I quote:
'When people begin to believe that organized society is unwilling or unable to impose upon criminal
offenders the punishment they deserve, there are sown the seeds of anarchy — of self-help, of vigilante
justice and lynch law. The people will take the law upon their hands and exact vengeance in the nature
of personal vendetta.'
It is for this reason, Mr. Speaker, that I stand here and support House Bill No. 62.
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As duly elected Representatives of our people, collectively, we ought to listen to our constituents and
heed their plea — a plea for life, liberty and pursuit of their happiness under a regime of justice and
democracy, and without threat that their loves ones will be kidnapped, raped or butchered.
But if such a misfortune befalls them, there is the law they could rely on for justice. A law that will
exact retribution for the victims. A law that will deter future animalistic behavior of the criminal who
take their selfish interest over and above that of society. A law that will deal a deathblow upon all
heinous crimes.
Mr. Speaker, my distinguished colleagues, for the preservation of all that we hold dear and sacred, let us
restore the death penalty."[36]
A studious comparison of the legislative proceedings in the Senate and in the House of Representatives
reveals that, while both Chambers were not wanting of oppositors to the death penalty, the Lower House
seemed less quarrelsome about the form of the death penalty bill as a special law specifying certain
heinous crimes without regard to the provisions of the Revised Penal Code and more unified in the
perception of what crimes are heinous and that the fact of their very heinousness involves the
compulsion and the imperative to suppress, if not completely eradicate, their occurrence. Be it the
foregoing general statement of Representative Sanchez or the following details of the nature of the
heinous crimes enumerated in House Bill No. 62 by Representative Miguel L. Romero of Negros
Oriental, there was clearly, among the hundred or so re-impositionists in the Lower House, no doubt as
to their cause:
"My friends, this bill provides for the imposition of the death penalty not only for the importation,
manufacture and sale of dangerous drugs, but also for other heinous crimes such as reason; parricide;
murder; kidnapping; robbery; rape as defined by the Revised Penal Code with or without additionally
defined circumstances; plunder, as defined in R.A. 7080; piracy, as defined under Section 2 of PD 532;
carnapping, as defined in Section 2 of RA 6539, when the owner, driver or occupant is killed; hijacking,
as defined in xxx RA 6235; and arson resulting in the death of any occupants.
All these crimes have a common denominator which qualifies them to the level of heinous crimes. A
heinous crime is one which, by reason of its inherent or manifest wickedness, viciousness, atrocity or
perversity, is repugnant and outrageous to the common standards of decency and morality in a just and
civilized society.
For instance, the crime of treason is defined as a breach of allegiance to a government, committed by a
person who owes allegiance to it (U.S. v. Abad 1 Phil. 437). By the 'allegiance' is meant the obligation of
fidelity and obedience which individuals owe to the government under which they live or to their
sovereign in return for the protection which they receive (52 Am Jur 797).
In kidnapping, the though alone of one's loved one being held against his or her own will in some
unidentified xxx house by a group of scoundrels who are strangers is enough terrify and send shivers of
fear through the spine of any person, even scoundrels themselves.
In robbery accompanied by rape, intentional mutilation or arson, what is being punished by death is the
fact that the perpetrator, at the time of the commission of the crime, thinks nothing of the other crime he
commits and sees it merely as a form of self-amusement. When a homicide is committed by reason of
the robbery, the culprits are perceived as willing to take human life in exchange for money or other
personal property.
In the crime of rape, not only do we speak of the pain and agony of the parents over the personal shock
and suffering of their child but the stigma of the traumatic and degrading incident which has shattered
the victim's life and permanently destroyed her reputation, not to mention the ordeal of having to
undergo the shameful experience of police interrogation and court hearings.
Piracy, which is merely a higher form of robbery, is punished for the universal hostility of the
perpetrators against their victims who are passengers and complement of the vessel, and because of the
fact that, in the high seas, no one may be expected to be able to come to the rescue of the helpless
victims. For the same reason, Mr. Speaker, the crime of air piracy is punished due to the evil motive of
the hijackers in making unreasonable demands upon the sovereignty of an entire nation or nations,
coupled with the attendant circumstance of subjecting the passengers to terrorism." [37]
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The debate on House Bill No. 62 lasted from October 27, 1992 to February 11, 1993. On February 11,
1993, the Members of the House of Representatives overwhelmingly approved the death penalty bill on
second reading.
On February 23, 1993, after explaining their votes, the Members of the House of Representatives cast
their vote on House Bill No. 62 when it was up for consideration on third reading. [38] The results were
123 votes in favor, 26 votes against, and 2 abstentions
After the approval on third reading of House Bill No. 62 on February 23, 1993 and of Senate Bill No.
891 on August 16, 1993, the Bicameral Conference Committee convened to incorporate and consolidate
them.
On December 31, 1993, Republic Act (R.A.) No. 7659, entitled, "An Act to Impose the Death Penalty on
Certain Heinous Crimes, Amending for that Purpose the Revised Penal Code, as Amended, Other
Special Penal Laws, and for Other Purposes," took effect.[39]
Between December 31, 1993, when R.A. No. 7659 took effect, and the present time, criminal offenders
have been prosecuted under said law, and one of them, herein accused-appellant, has been, pursuant to
said law, meted out the supreme penalty of death for raping his ten-year old daughter. Upon his
conviction, his case was elevated to us on automatic review. On June 25, 1996, we affirmed his
conviction and the death sentence.
Now, accused-appellant comes to us in the heels of this court's affirmation of his death sentence and
raises for the first time the issue of the constitutionality of R.A. 7659. His thesis is two-fold: (1) that the
death penalty law is unconstitutional per se for having been enacted in the absence of compelling
reasons therefor; and (2) that the death penalty for rape is a cruel, excessive and inhuman punishment in
violation of the constitutional proscription against punishment of such nature.
Three justices interposed their dissent hereto, agreeing with accused-appellant's view that Congress
enacted R.A. No. 7659 without complying with the twin requirements of compelling reasons and
heinous crimes.
At this juncture, the detailed events leading to the enactment of R.A. No. 7659 as unfurled in the
beginning of this disquisition, necessarily provide the context for the following analysis.
Article III, Section 19 (1) of the 1987 Constitution plainly vests in Congress the power to re-impose the
death penalty "for compelling reasons involving heinous crimes". This power is not subsumed in the
plenary legislative power of Congress, for it is subject to a clear showing of "compelling reasons
involving heinous crimes."
The constitutional exercise of this limited power to re-impose the death penalty entails (1) that Congress
define or describe what is meant by heinous crimes; (2) that Congress specify and penalize by death,
only crimes that qualify as heinous in accordance with the definition or description set in the death
penalty bill and/or designate crimes punishable by reclusion perpetua to death in which latter case, death
can only be imposed upon the attendance of circumstances duly proven in court that characterize the
crime to be heinous in accordance with the definition or description set in the death penalty bill; and (3)
that Congress, in enacting this death penalty bill be singularly motivated by "compelling reasons
involving heinous crimes."
In the second whereas clause of the preamble of R.A. No. 7659, we find the definition or description of
heinous crimes. Said clause provides that
"x x x the crimes punishable by death under this Act are heinous for being grievous, odious and hateful
offenses and which, by reason of their inherent or manifest wickedness, viciousness, atrocity and
perversity are repugnant and outrageous to the common standards and norms of decency and morality in
a just, civilized and ordered society."
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Justice Santiago Kapunan, in his dissenting opinion in People v. Alicando, [40] traced the etymological
root of the word "heinous" to the Early Spartans' word, "haineus", meaning, hateful and abominable,
which, in turn, was from the Greek prefix "haton", denoting acts so hatefully or shockingly evil.
During the debates on the proposed death penalty bill, Senators Lina and Tañada grilled the sponsors of
the bill as regards what they perceived as a mere enumeration of capital crimes without a specification
of the elements that make them heinous. They were oblivious to the fact that there were two types of
crimes in the death penalty bill: first, there were crimes penalized by reclusion perpetua to death; and
second, there were crimes penalized by mandatory capital punishment upon the attendance of certain
specified qualifying circumstances.
Under R.A. No. 7659, the following crimes are penalized by reclusion perpetua to death:
(6) Kidnapping and serious illegal detention if attended by any of the following four circumstances: (a)
the victim was detained for more than three days; (b) it was committed simulating public authority; (c)
serious physical injuries were inflicted on the victim or threats to kill him were made; and (d) if the
victim is a minor, except when the accused is any of the parents, female or a public officer (Sec. 8);
(8) Destructive arson if what is burned is (a) one or more buildings or edifice; (b) a building where
people usually gather; (c) a train, ship or airplane for public use; (d) a building or factory in the service
of public utilities; (e) a building for the purpose of concealing or destroying evidence Or a crime; (f) an
arsenal, fireworks factory, or government museum; and (g) a storehouse or factory of explosive
materials located in an inhabited place; or regardless of what is burned, if the arson is perpetrated by two
or more persons (Sec. 10);
(9) Rape attended by any of the following circumstances: (a) the rape is committed with a deadly
weapon; (b) the rape is committed by two or more persons; and (c) the rape is attempted or frustrated
and committed with homicide (Sec. 11);
(12) Sale, administration, delivery, distribution, and transportation of prohibited drugs (id.);
(13) Maintenance of den, dive or resort for users of prohibited drugs (id.);
(19) Sale, administration, dispensation, delivery, transportation, and distribution of regulated drugs
(id.);
(20) Maintenance of den, dive, or resort for users of regulated drugs (Sec. 15);
(23) Planting evidence of dangerous drugs in person or immediate vicinity of another to implicate the
latter (Sec. 19); and
(24) Carnapping where the owner, driver or occupant of the carnapped motor vehicle is killed or raped
(Sec. 20).
All the foregoing crimes are not capital crimes per se, the uniform penalty for all of them being not
mandatory death but the flexible penalty of reclusion perpetua to death. In other words, it is premature
to demand for a specification of the heinous elements in each of foregoing crimes because they are not
anyway mandatorily penalized with death. The elements that call for the imposition of the supreme
penalty of death in these crimes, would only be relevant when the trial court, given the prerogative to
impose reclusion perpetua, instead actually imposes the death penalty because it has, in appreciating the
evidence proffered before it, found the attendance of certain circumstances in the manner by which the
crime was committed, or in the person of the accused on his own or in relation to the victim, or in any
other matter of significance to the commission of the crime or its effects on the victim or on society,
which circumstances characterize the criminal acts as grievous, odious, or hateful, or inherently or
manifestly wicked, vicious, atrocious or perverse as to be repugnant and outrageous to the common
standards and norms of decency and morality in a just, civilized and ordered society.
On the other hand, under R.A. No. 7659, the mandatory penalty of death is imposed in the following
crimes:
"If any public officer is entrusted with law enforcement and he refrains from arresting or prosecuting an
offender who has committed a crime punishable by reclusion perpetua and/or death in consideration of
any offer, promise, gift or present, he shall suffer the penalty for the offense which was not prosecuted.
If it is the public officer who asks or demands such gift or present, he shall suffer the penalty of
death." (Sec. 4)
(2) Kidnapping and serious illegal detention for ransom resulting in the death of the victim or the victim
is raped, tortured or subjected to dehumanizing acts
"The penalty shall be death where the kidnapping or detention was committed for the purpose of ransom
from the victim or any other person, even if none of the circumstances above-mentioned were present in
the commission of the offense.
When the victim is killed or dies as a consequence of the detention or is raped, or is subject to torture or
dehumanizing acts, the maximum penalty [of death] shall be imposed." (Sec. 8)
"If as a consequence of the commission of any of the acts penalized under this Article, death results, the
mandatory penalty of death shall be imposed." (Sec. 10)
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(4) Rape with the victim becoming insane, rape with homicide and qualified
"When by reason or on the occasion of the rape, the victim has become insane, the penalty shall be
death.
When by reason or on the occasion of the rape, a homicide is committed, the penalty shall be death.
The death penalty shall also be imposed if the crime of rape is committed with any of the following
attendant circumstances:
1. when the victim is under eighteen (18) years of age and the offender is a parent, ascendant, step-
parent, guardian, relative by consanguinity or affinity within the third civil degree, or the common-law
spouse of the parent or the victim.
2. when the victim is under the custody of the police or military authorities.
3. when the rape is committed in full view of the husband, parent, any of the children or other relatives
within the third degree of consanguinity.
4. when the victim is a religious or a child below seven (7) years old
5. when the offender knows that he is afflicted with Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS)
disease.
6. when committed by any member of the Armed Forces of the Philippines or the Philippine National
Police or any law enforcement agency.
7. when by reason or on the occasion of the rape, the victim has suffered permanent physical
mutilation." (Sec. 11 )
(5) Sale, administration, delivery, distribution and transportation of prohibited drugs where the victim is
a minor or the victim dies
"Notwithstanding the provision of Section 20 of this Act to the contrary, if the victim of the offense is a
minor, or should a prohibited drug involved in any offense under this Section be the proximate cause of
the death of victim thereof, the maximum penalty [of death] herein provided shall be imposed." (Sec.
13)
(6) Maintenance of den, dive, or resort for users of prohibited drugs where the victim is a minor or the
victim dies
"Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 20 of this Act to the contrary, the maximum of the penalty
[of death] shall be imposed in every case where a prohibited drug is administered, delivered or sold to a
minor who is allowed to use the same in such place.
Should a prohibited drug be the proximate case of the death of a person using the same in such den, dive
or resort, the maximum penalty herein provided shall be imposed on the maintainer notwithstanding the
provisions of Section 20 of this Act to the contrary." (Sec. 13)
(7) Sale, administration, dispensation, delivery, distribution and transportation of regulated drugs where
the victim is a minor or the victim dies
"Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 20 of this Act to the contrary, if the victim of the offense is a
minor, or should a regulated drug involved in any offense under this Section be the proximate cause of
the death of a victim thereof, the maximum penalty [of death] herein provided shall be imposed." (Sec.
14)
(8) Maintenance of den, dive, or resort for users of regulated drugs where the victim is a minor or the
victim dies
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"Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 20 of this Act to the contrary, the maximum penalty [of
death] herein provided shall be imposed in every case where a regulated drug is administered, delivered
or sold to a minor who is allowed to use the same in such place.
Should a regulated drug be the proximate cause of death of a person using the same in such den, dive or
resort, the maximum penalty herein provided shall be imposed on the maintainer notwithstanding the
provisions of Section 20 of this Act to the contrary." (Sec. 15)
(9) Drug offenses if convicted are government officials, employees or officers including members of
police agencies and armed forces
"The maximum penalties [of death] provided for in Section 3, 4 (1), 5(1), 6, 7, 8, 9, 11,12 and 13 of
Article II and Sections 14, 14-A, 14(1), 15A (1), 16, and 19 of Article III [of the Dangerous Drugs Act of
1972] shall be imposed, if those found guilty or any of the same offenses are government officials,
employees or officers including members of police agencies and the armed forces." (Sec. 19)
(10) Planting of dangerous drugs as evidence in drug offenses with the mandatory death penalty if
convicted are government officials, employees or officers
"Any such above government official, employee or officer who is found guilty of 'planting' any
dangerous drugs punished in Section s 3, 4, 7, 8, 9 and 13 of Article II and Sections 14, 14-A, 15, and 16
of Article III (of the Dangerous Drugs Act of 1972) in the person or in the immediate vicinity of another
as evidence to implicate the latter, shall suffer the same penalty as therein provided." (Sec. 19)
(11) In all the crimes in RA. No. 7659 in their qualified form
"When in the commission of the crime, advantage was taken by the offender of his public position, the
penalty to be imposed shall be in its maximum [of death] regardless of mitigating circumstances.
The maximum penalty [of death] shall be imposed if the offense was committed by any person who
belongs to an organized/syndicated crime group.
It is specifically against the foregoing capital crimes that the test of heinousness must be squarely
applied.
The evil of a crime may take various forms. There are crimes that are, by their very nature, despicable,
either because life was callously taken or the victim is treated like an animal and utterly dehumanized as
to completely disrupt the normal course of his or her growth as a human being. The right of a person is
not only to live but to live a quality life, and this means that the rest of society is obligated to respect his
or her individual personality, the integrity and the sanctity of his or her own physical body, and the value
he or she puts in his or her own spiritual, psychological, material and social preferences and needs. Seen
in this light, the capital crimes of kidnapping and serious illegal detention for ransom resulting in the
death of the victim or the victim is raped, tortured, or subjected to dehumanizing acts; destructive arson
resulting in death, and drug offenses involving minors or resulting in the death of the victim in the case
of other crimes; as well as murder, rape, parricide, infanticide, kidnapping and serious illegal detention
where the victim is detained for more than three days or serious physical injuries were inflicted on the
victim or threats to kill him were made or the victim is a minor, robbery with homicide, rape or
intentional mutilation, destructive arson, and carnapping where the owner, driver or occupant of the
carnapped vehicle is killed or raped, which are penalized by reclusion perpetua to death, are clearly
heinous by their very nature.
There are crimes, however, in which the abomination lies in the significance and implications of the
subject criminal acts in the scheme of the larger socio-political and economic context in which the state
finds itself to be struggling to develop and provide for its poor and underprivileged masses. Reeling
from decades of corrupt tyrannical rule that bankrupted the government and impoverished the
population, the Philippine Government must muster the political will to dismantle the culture of
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corruption, dishonesty, greed and syndicated criminality that so deeply entrenched itself in the structures
of society and psyche of the populace. Terribly lacking the money to provide even the most basic
services to its people, any form of misappropriation or misapplication of government funds translates to
an actual threat to the very existence of government, and in turn, the very survival of the people it
governs over. Viewed in this context, no less heinous are the effects and repercussions of crimes like
qualified bribery, destructive arson resulting in death, and drug offenses involving government officials,
employees or officers, that their perpetrators must not be allowed to cause further destruction and
damage to society.
We have no doubt, therefore, that insofar as the element of heinousness is concerned, R.A. No. 7659 has
correctly identified crimes warranting the mandatory penalty of death. As to the other crimes in R.A.
No. 7659 punished by reclusion perpetua to death, they are admittingly no less abominable than those
mandatorily penalized by death. The proper time to determine their heinousness in contemplation of
law, is when on automatic review, we are called to pass on a death sentence involving crimes punishable
by reclusion perpetua to death under R.A. No. 7659, with the trial court meting out the death sentence in
exercise of judicial discretion. This is not to say, however, that the aggravating circumstances under the
Revised Penal Code need be additionally alleged as establishing the heinousness of the crime for the
trial court to validly impose the death penalty in the crimes under R.A. No. 7659 which are punished
with the flexible penalty of reclusion perpetua to death.
In the first place, the 1987 Constitution did not amend or repeal the provisions of the Revised Penal
Code relating to aggravating circumstances. Secondly, R.A. No. 7659, while it specifies circumstances
that generally qualify a crime provided therein to be punished by the maximum penalty of death, neither
amends nor repeals the aggravating circumstances under the Revised Penal Code. Thus, construing R.A.
No. 7659 in parimateria with the Revised Penal Code, death may be imposed when (1) aggravating
circumstances attend the commission of the crime as to make operative the provision of the Revised
Penal Code regarding the imposition of the maximum penalty; and (2) other circumstances attend the
commission of the crime which indubitably characterize the same as heinous in contemplation of R.A.
No. 7659 that justify the imposition of the death, albeit the imposable penalty is reclusion perpetua to
death. Without difficulty, we understand the rationale for the guided discretion granted in the trial court
to cognize circumstances that characterize the commission of the crime as heinous. Certainly there is an
infinity of circumstances that may attend the commission of a crime to the same extent that there is no
telling the evil that man is capable of. The legislature cannot and need not foresee and inscribe in law
each and every loathsome act man is capable of. It is sufficient thus that R.A. 7659 provides the test and
yardstick for the determination of the legal situation warranting the imposition of the supreme penalty of
death. Needless to say, we are not unaware of the ever existing danger of abuse of discretion on the part
of the trial court in meting out the death sentence. Precisely to reduce to nil the possibility of executing
an innocent man or one criminal but not heinously criminal, R.A. 7659 is replete with both procedural
and substantive safeguards that ensure only the correct application of the mandate of R.A. No. 7659.
In the course of the congressional debates on the constitutional requirement that the death penalty be re-
imposed for compelling reasons involving heinous crimes, we note that the main objection to the death
penalty bill revolved around the persistent demand of the abolitionists for a statement of the reason in
each and every heinous crime and statistical proof the such compelling reason actually exists.
We believe, however, that the elements of heinousness and compulsion are inseparable and are, in fact,
interspersed with each other. Because the subject crimes are either so revolting and debasing as to
violate the most minimum of the human standards of decency or its effects, repercussions, implications
and consequences so destructive, destabilizing, debilitating, or aggravating in the context of our socio-
political and economic agenda as a developing nation, these crimes must be frustrated, curtailed and
altogether eradicated. There can be no ifs or buts in the face of evil, and we cannot afford to wait until
we rub elbows with it before grasping it by the ears and thrashing it to its demission.
The abolitionists in congress insisted that all criminal reforms first be pursued and implemented before
the death penalty be re-imposed in case such reforms prove unsuccessful. They claimed that the only
compelling reason contemplated of by the constitution is that nothing else but the death penalty is left
for the government to resort to that could check the chaos and the destruction that is being caused by
unbridled criminality. Three of our colleagues, are of the opinion that the compelling reason required by
the constitution is that there occurred a dramatic and significant change in the socio-cultural milieu after
the suspension of the death penalty on February 2, 1987 such as an unprecedented rise in the incidence
of criminality. Such are, however, interpretations only of the phrase "compelling reasons" but not of the
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conjunctive phrase "compelling reasons involving heinous crimes". The imposition of the requirement
that there be a rise in the incidence of criminality because of the suspension of the death penalty,
moreover, is an unfair and misplaced demand, for what it amounts to, in fact, is a requirement that the
death penalty first proves itself to be a truly deterrent factor in criminal behavior. If there was a
dramatically higher incidence of criminality during the time that the death penalty was suspended, that
would have proven that the death penalty was indeed a deterrent during the years before its suspension.
Suffice it to say that the constitution in the first place did not require that the death penalty be first
proven to be a deterrent; what it requires is that there be compelling reasons involving heinous crimes.
Article III, Section 19 (1) of the 1987 Constitution simply states that congress, for compelling reasons
involving heinous crimes, may re-impose the death penalty. Nothing in the said provision imposes a
requirement that for a death penalty bill to be valid, a positive manifestation in the form of a higher
incidence of crime should first be perceived and statistically proven following the suspension of the
death penalty. Neither does the said provision require that the death penalty be resorted to as a last
recourse when all other criminal reforms have failed to abate criminality in society. It is immaterial and
irrelevant that R.A. No. 7659 cites that there has been an "alarming upsurge of such crimes", for the
same was never intended by said law to be the yardstick to determine the existence of compelling
reasons involving heinous crimes. Fittingly, thus, what R.A. No. 7659 states is that "the Congress, in the
interest of justice, public order and rule of law, and the need to rationalize and harmonize the penal
sanctions for heinous crimes, finds compelling reasons to impose the death penalty for said crimes."
We now proceed to answer accused-appellant's other ground for attacking the constitutionality of R.A.
No. 7659, i.e., that the death penalty imposed in rape is violative of the constitutional proscription
against cruel, degrading or inhuman punishment.
Accused-appellant first claims that the death penalty is per se a cruel, degrading or inhuman punishment
as ruled by the United States (U.S.) Supreme Court in Furman v. Georgia.[41] To state, however, that the
U.S. Supreme Court, in Furman, categorically ruled that the death penalty is a cruel, degrading or
inhuman punishment, is misleading and inaccurate.
The issue in Furman was not so much death penalty itself but the arbitrariness pervading the procedures
by which the death penalty was imposed on the accused by the sentencing jury. Thus, the defense theory
in Furman centered not so much on the nature of the death penalty as a criminal sanction but on the
discrimination against the black accused who is meted out the death penalty by a white jury that is given
the unconditional discretion to determine whether or not to impose the death penalty. In fact, the long
road of the American abolitionist movement leading to the landmark case of Furman was trekked by
American civil rights advocates zealously fighting against racial discrimination. Thus, the U.S. Supreme
Court stated in Furman:
"We cannot say from facts disclosed in these records that these defendants were sentenced to death
because they were black. Yet our task is not restricted to an effort to divine what motives impelled these
death penalties. Rather, we deal with a system of law and of justice that leaves to the uncontrolled
discretion of judges or juries the determination whether defendants committing these crimes should die x
x x.
xxx
In a Nation committed to equal protection of the laws there is no permissible 'caste' aspect of law
enforcement. Yet we know that the discretion of judges and juries in imposing the death penalty enables
the penalty to be selectively applied, feeding prejudices against the accused if he is poor and despised x
x x.
xxx
Thus, these discretionary statutes are unconstitutional in their operation. They are pregnant with
discrimination and discrimination is an ingredient not compatible with the idea of equal protection of the
laws that is implicit in the ban on 'cruel and unusual' punishments."
Furman, thus, did not outlaw the death penalty because it was cruel and unusual per se. While the U.S.
Supreme Court nullified all discretionary death penalty statutes in Furman, it did so because the
discretion which these statutes vested in the trial judges and sentencing juries was uncontrolled and
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without any parameters, guidelines, or standards intended to lessen, if not altogether eliminate, the
intervention of personal biases, prejudices and discriminatory acts on the part of the trial judges and
sentencing juries.
Consequently, in the aftermath of Furman, when most of the states re-enacted their death penalty statutes
now bearing the procedural checks that were required by the U.S. Supreme Court, said court affirmed
the constitutionality of the new death penalty statutes in the cases of Gregg v. Georgia,[42] Jurek v. Texas,
[43] and Profitt v. Florida.[44]
Next, accused-appellant asseverates that the death penalty is a cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment
for the crime of rape mainly because the latter, unlike murder, does not involve the taking of life. In
support of his contention, accused-appellant largely relies on the ruling of the U.S. Supreme Court in
Coker v. Georgia.[45]
"x x x It is now settled that the death penalty is not invariably cruel and unusual punishment within the
meaning of the Eighth Amendment; it is not inherently barbaric or an unacceptable mode of punishment
for crime; neither is it always disproportionate to the crime for which it is imposed. It is also established
that imposing capital punishment, at least for murder, in accordance with the procedures provided under
the Georgia statutes saves the sentence from the infirmities which led the Court to invalidate the prior
Georgia capital punishment statute in Furman v. Georgia x x x.
xxx
In Gregg [v. Georgia] x x x the Court's judgment was that the death penalty for deliberate murder was
neither the purposeless imposition of severe punishment nor a punishment grossly disproportionate to
the crime. But the Court reserved the question of the constitutionality of the death penalty when
imposed for other crimes. x x x
That question, with respect to rape of an adult woman, is now before us.
xxx
x x x [T]he public judgment with respect to rape, as reflected in the statutes providing the punishment
for that crime, has been dramatically different. In reviving death penalty laws to satisfy Furman's
mandate, none of the States that had not previously authorized death for rape chose to include rape
among capital felonies. Of the 16 States in which rape had been a capital offense, only three provided
the death penalty for rape of an adult woman in their revised statutes -- Georgia, North Carolina. and
Louisiana. In the latter two States, the death penalty was mandatory for those found guilty, and those
laws were invalidated by Woodson and Roberts. When Louisiana and North Carolina, respondent to
those decisions, again revised their capital punishment laws, they reenacted the death penalty for murder
but not for rape; none of the seven other legislatures that to our knowledge have amended or replaced
their death penalty statutes since July 2, 1976, including four States (in addition to Louisiana and North
Carolina) that had authorized the death sentence for rape prior to 1972 and had reacted to Furman with
mandatory statutes, included rape among the crimes for which death was an authorized punishment.
xxx
It should be noted that Florida, Mississippi, and Tennessee also authorized the death penalty in some
rape cases, but only where the victim was a child, and the rapist an adult, the Tennessee statute has since
been invalidated because the death sentence was mandatory. x x x The upshot is that Georgia is the sole
jurisdiction in the United States at the present time that authorizes a sentence of death when the rape
victim is an adult woman, and only two other jurisdictions provide capital punishment when the victim
is a child
The current judgment with respect to the death penalty for rape is not wholly unanimous among state
legislatures, but it obviously weighs very heavily on the side of rejecting capital punishment as a
suitable penalty for raping an adult woman.
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x x x [T]he legislative rejection of capital punishment for rape strongly confirms our own judgment,
which is that death is indeed a disproportionate penalty for the crime of raping an adult woman.
We do not discount the seriousness of rape as a crime. It is highly reprehensible, both in a moral sense
and in its almost total contempt for the personal integrity and autonomy of the female victim and for the
latter's privilege of choosing those with whom intimate relationships are to be established. Short of
homicide, it is the 'ultimate violation of self.' It is also a violent crime because it normally involves
force, or the threat of force or intimidation, to over come the will and the capacity of the victim to resist.
Rape is very often accompanied by physical injury to the female and can also inflict mental and
psychological damage. Because it undermines the community's sense of security, there is public injury
as well.
Rape is without doubt deserving of serious punishment; but in terms of moral depravity and of the injury
to the person and to the public, it does not compare with murder, which does involve the unjustified
taking of human life. Although it may be accompanied by another crime, rape by definition does not
include the death of or even the serious injury to another person. The murderer kills; the rapist, if no
more than that, does not. Life is over for the victim of the murderer; for the rape victim, life may not be
nearly so happy as it was, but it is not over and normally is not beyond repair. We have the abiding
conviction that the death penalty, which 'is unique in its severity and irrevocability' x x x is an excessive
penalty for the rapist who, as such, does not take human life."
The U.S. Supreme Court based its foregoing ruling on two grounds: first, that the public has manifested
its rejection of the death penalty as a proper punishment for the crime of rape through the willful
omission by the state legislatures to include rape in their new death penalty statutes in the aftermath of
Furman; and second, that rape, while concededly a dastardly contemptuous violation of a woman's
spiritual integrity, physical privacy, and psychological balance, does not involve the taking of life.
Anent the first ground, we fail to see how this could have any bearing on the Philippine experience and
in the context of our own culture.
Anent the second ground, we disagree with the court's predicate that the gauge of whether or not a crime
warrants the death penalty or not, is the attendance of the circumstance of death on the part of the
victim. Such a premise is in fact an ennobling of the biblical notion of retributive justice of "an eye for
an eye, a tooth for a tooth". We have already demonstrated earlier in our discussion of heinous crimes
that the forfeiture of life simply because life was taken, never was a defining essence of the death
penalty in the context of our legal history and cultural experience; rather, the death penalty is imposed in
heinous crimes because the perpetrators thereof have committed unforgivably execrable acts that have so
deeply dehumanized a person or criminal acts with severely destructive effects on the national efforts to
lift the masses from abject poverty through organized governmental strategies based on a disciplined and
honest citizenry, and because they have so caused irreparable and substantial injury to both their victim
and the society and a repetition of their acts would pose actual threat to the safety of individuals and the
survival of government, they must be permanently prevented from doing so. At any rate, this court has
no doubts as to the innate heinousness of the crime of rape, as we have held in the case of People v.
Cristobal: [46]
"Rape is the forcible violation of the sexual intimacy of another person. It does injury to justice and
charity. Rape deeply wounds the respect, freedom, and physical and moral integrity to which every
person has a right. It causes grave damage that can mark the victim for life. It is always an intrinsically
evil act xxx an outrage upon decency and dignity that hurts not only the victim but the society itself."
We are not unaware that for all the legal posturings we have so essayed here, at the heart of the issue of
capital punishment is the wistful, sentimental life-and-death question to which all of us, without
thinking, would answer, "life, of course, over death". But dealing with the fundamental question of
death provides a context for struggling with even more basic questions, for to grapple with the meaning
of death is, in an indirect way, to ask the meaning of life. Otherwise put, to ask what the rights are of the
dying is to ask what the rights are of the living.
"Capital punishment ought not to be abolished solely because it is substantially repulsive, if infinitely
less repulsive than the acts which invoke it. Yet the mounting zeal for its abolition seems to arise from a
sentimentalized hyperfastidiousness that seeks to expunge from the society all that appears harsh and
suppressive. If we are to preserve the humane society we will have to retain sufficient strength of
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character and will to do the unpleasant in order that tranquillity and civility may rule comprehensively.
It seems very likely that capital punishment is a x x x necessary, if limited factor in that maintenance of
social tranquillity and ought to be retained on this ground. To do otherwise is to indulge in the luxury of
permitting a sense of false delicacy to reign over the necessity of social survival." [47]
WHEREFORE, in view of all the foregoing, the Motion for Reconsideration and the Supplemental
Motion for Reconsideration are hereby DENIED[48] for LACK OF MERIT.
SO ORDERED.
Narvasa, C.J., Padilla, Regalado, Davide, Jr., Romero, Bellosillo, Melo, Puno, Vitug, Kapunan,
Mendoza, Francisco, Hermosisima, Jr., Panganiban, and Torres, Jr., JJ., concur.
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