This document summarizes a court case from 1916 regarding a policeman, Andres Pablo, who was charged with perjury. Pablo had raided an illegal gambling operation but later provided false testimony in court that exonerated two of the accused men, Maximo Malicsi and Antonio Rodrigo. Other witnesses testified that Pablo had met privately with Malicsi and Rodrigo prior to the trial and was paid money to provide false testimony. Pablo was found guilty of perjury and sentenced to two years in prison and other penalties. The court upheld the conviction, finding his testimony in the original case to be deliberately false.
This document summarizes a court case from 1916 regarding a policeman, Andres Pablo, who was charged with perjury. Pablo had raided an illegal gambling operation but later provided false testimony in court that exonerated two of the accused men, Maximo Malicsi and Antonio Rodrigo. Other witnesses testified that Pablo had met privately with Malicsi and Rodrigo prior to the trial and was paid money to provide false testimony. Pablo was found guilty of perjury and sentenced to two years in prison and other penalties. The court upheld the conviction, finding his testimony in the original case to be deliberately false.
This document summarizes a court case from 1916 regarding a policeman, Andres Pablo, who was charged with perjury. Pablo had raided an illegal gambling operation but later provided false testimony in court that exonerated two of the accused men, Maximo Malicsi and Antonio Rodrigo. Other witnesses testified that Pablo had met privately with Malicsi and Rodrigo prior to the trial and was paid money to provide false testimony. Pablo was found guilty of perjury and sentenced to two years in prison and other penalties. The court upheld the conviction, finding his testimony in the original case to be deliberately false.
This document summarizes a court case from 1916 regarding a policeman, Andres Pablo, who was charged with perjury. Pablo had raided an illegal gambling operation but later provided false testimony in court that exonerated two of the accused men, Maximo Malicsi and Antonio Rodrigo. Other witnesses testified that Pablo had met privately with Malicsi and Rodrigo prior to the trial and was paid money to provide false testimony. Pablo was found guilty of perjury and sentenced to two years in prison and other penalties. The court upheld the conviction, finding his testimony in the original case to be deliberately false.
THE UNITED STATES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. ANDRES PABLO,
defendant-appellant.
Alfonso E. Mendoza for appellant.
Attorney-General Avanceña for appellee.
SYLLABUS
1. FALSE TESTIMONY; REPEAL OF ACT NO. 1697; LAW NOW
APPLICABLE. — By the mere interpretation of this court in various decisions, Act No. 1697 was deemed to have repealed certain articles of the Penal Code relative to false testimony, notwithstanding that the said Act did not expressly repeal them; and as the final article and section of the Administrative Code (Act No. 2657), paragraph 2, has totally repealed the said Act No. 1697, without stating that the articles of the Penal Code relating to false testimony comprised within the term of perjury were likewise repealed; and if it is undeniable that the community must necessarily punish perjury or false testimony, and if it is impossible to conceive that crimes of this kind may go immune and be freely committed without any punishment at all, because the liberty to pervert the truth, in sworn testimony for the very reason that it might save a guilty party from punishment, might also determine the conviction and punishment of an innocent party, the conclusion is inevitable that there must be some previous and preexisting law which punishes perjury or false testimony — a punishment required by good morals and by the law, even in a society of mediocre, culture, in order to avoid incalculable harm and resultant disturbances which might affect public order. 2. ID.; ID.; ID. — For the reasons above stated and in view of the provisions of Law 2, Title 2, Book 3, of the Novisima Recopilacion, the needs of society demand that articles 318 to 324 of the Penal Code be deemed to be in force, inasmuch as the said Administrative Code, in repealing the said Act on perjury, did not explicitly declare that the said articles of the Penal code were likewise repealed.
DECISION
TORRES, J : p
At about noon of the 21st of October, 1915, Andres Pablo, a policeman
This manner of understanding and construing the statutes applicable to the crime of false testimony or perjury is in harmony with the provision of Law 11, Title 2, Book 3, of the Novisima Recopilacion which says: "All the laws of the kingdom, not expressly repealed by other subsequent laws, must be literally obeyed and the excuse that they are not in use cannot avail; for the Catholic kings and their successors so ordered in numerous laws, and so also have I ordered on different occasions, and even though they have repealed, it is seen that they have been revived by the decree which I issued in conformity with them although they were not expressly designated. The council will be informed thereof and will take account of the importance of the matter." It is, then, assumed that the said articles of the Penal Code are in force and are properly applicable to crimes of false testimony. Therefore, in consideration of the fact that in the case at bar the evidence shows it to have been duly proven that the defendant, Andres Pablo, in testifying in the cause prosecuted for gambling at jueteng, perverted the truth, for the purpose of favoring the alleged gamblers, Maximo Malicsi and Antonio Rodrigo, with the aggravating circumstance of the crime being committed through bribery, for it was also proved that the defendant pablo received P15 in order that he should make no mention of the said alleged gamblers in his sworn testimony, whereby he knowingly perverted the truth, we hold that, in the commission of the crime of false testimony, there concurred the aggravating circumstance of price or reward, No. 3 of article 10 of the Code, with no mitigating circumstance to offset the effects of the said aggravating one; wherefore the defendant has incurred the maximum period of the penalty of arresto mayor in its maximum degree to prision correccional in its medium degree, and a fine. For the foregoing reasons, we hereby reverse the judgment appealed from and sentence Andres Pablo to the penalty of two years four months and one day of prision correccional, to pay a fine of P1,000 pesetas, and, in case of insolvency, to suffer the corresponding subsidiary imprisonment, which shall not exceed one-third of the principal penalty. He shall also pay the costs of both instances. So ordered. Johnson, Carson, Trent, and Araullo, JJ., concur. Moreland, J., concurs in the result.