Habeas Corpus
Habeas Corpus
Habeas Corpus
did not have any of the women under their custody or control,
and because their jurisdiction did not extend beyond the
boundaries of the city of Manila. According to an exhibit
attached to the answer of the fiscal, the 170 women were
destined to be laborers, at good salaries, on the haciendas of
Yigo and Governor Sales. In open court, the fiscal admitted,
in answer to question of a member of the court, that these
women had been sent out of Manila without their consent. The
court awarded the writ, in an order of November 4, that
directed Justo Lukban, Mayor of the city of Manila, Anton
Hohmann, chief of police of the city of Manila, Francisco Sales,
governor of the province of Davao, and Feliciano Yigo, an
hacendero of Davao, to bring before the court the persons
therein named, alleged to be deprived of their liberty, on
December 2, 1918.
Before the date mentioned, seven of the women had returned
to Manila at their own expense. On motion of counsel for
petitioners, their testimony was taken before the clerk of the
Supreme Court sitting as commissioners. On the day named in
the order, December 2nd, 1918, none of the persons in whose
behalf the writ was issued were produced in court by the
respondents. It has been shown that three of those who had
been able to come back to Manila through their own efforts,
were notified by the police and the secret service to appear
before the court. The fiscal appeared, repeated the facts more
comprehensively, reiterated the stand taken by him when
pleading to the original petition copied a telegram from the
Mayor of the city of Manila to the provincial governor of Davao
and the answer thereto, and telegrams that had passed
between the Director of Labor and the attorney for that Bureau
then in Davao, and offered certain affidavits showing that the
women were contained with their life in Mindanao and did not
wish to return to Manila. Respondents Sales answered alleging
that it was not possible to fulfill the order of the Supreme Court
because the women had never been under his control,
because they were at liberty in the Province of Davao, and
because they had married or signed contracts as laborers.
Respondent Yigo answered alleging that he did not have any
of the women under his control and that therefore it was
impossible for him to obey the mandate. The court, after due
deliberation, on December 10, 1918, promulgated a second
order, which related that the respondents had not complied
with the original order to the satisfaction of the court nor
explained their failure to do so, and therefore directed that
those of the women not in Manila be brought before the court
by respondents Lukban, Hohmann, Sales, and Yigo on
January 13, 1919, unless the women should, in written
statements voluntarily made before the judge of first instance
of Davao or the clerk of that court, renounce the right, or
unless the respondents should demonstrate some other legal
motives that made compliance impossible. It was further stated
that the question of whether the respondents were in contempt
of court would later be decided and the reasons for the order
announced in the final decision.
Before January 13, 1919, further testimony including that of a
number of the women, of certain detectives and policemen,
and of the provincial governor of Davao, was taken before the
clerk of the Supreme Court sitting as commissioner and the
clerk of the Court of First Instance of Davao acting in the same
capacity. On January 13, 1919, the respondents technically
presented before the Court the women who had returned to the
city through their own efforts and eight others who had been
brought to Manila by the respondents. Attorneys for the
respondents, by their returns, once again recounted the facts
and further endeavored to account for all of the persons
involved in the habeas corpus. In substance, it was stated that
the respondents, through their representatives and agents, had
succeeded in bringing from Davao with their consent eight
women; that eighty-one women were found in Davao who, on
notice that if they desired they could return to Manila,
transportation fee, renounced the right through sworn
statements; that fifty-nine had already returned to Manila by
other means, and that despite all efforts to find them twenty-six
could not be located. Both counsel for petitioners and the city
fiscal were permitted to submit memoranda. The first formally
asked the court to find Justo Lukban, Mayor of the city of
Manila, Anton Hohmann, chief of police of the city of Manila,
Jose Rodriguez and Fernando Ordax, members of the police
In re Gonzales
Before Us is a Petition for Review under Rule 45 of the Rules
of Court assailing the Decision[1] of the Court of Appeals in
CA-G.R. SP No. 90546 which dismissed the Petition for
Habeas Corpus filed by petitioner Roberto Rafael Pulido
(Pulido) in behalf of Cezari Gonzales and Julius Mesa, and
imposed on petitioner the penalty of censure, and its
Resolution[2] dated 6 January 2006 denying his motion for
reconsideration.
The facts are not disputed.
At around one oclock in the morning of 27 July 2003, three
hundred twenty-one (321) junior officers and enlisted
personnel of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP)
entered and took over the premises of the Oakwood Premiere
Luxury Apartments (Oakwood) located at the Glorietta
Complex, Ayala Avenue, Makati City. They disarmed the
security guards of said establishment and planted explosives in
its immediate surroundings.
The soldiers publicly announced that they went to Oakwood to
air their grievances against the administration of President
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo (President Arroyo). They declared
their withdrawal of support from the Commander-in-Chief of the
AFP President Arroyo and demanded her resignation and that
of the members of her cabinet and top officers of both the AFP
and the Philippine National Police (PNP).
At about one oclock in the afternoon, President Arroyo issued
Proclamation No. 427 declaring the country to be under a state
of rebellion. Consequently, she issued General Order No. 4
directing the AFP and the PNP to carry out all reasonable
measures, giving due regard to constitutional rights, to
suppress and quell the rebellion.
After a series of negotiations between the soldiers and the
government negotiators, the former agreed to return to
barracks, thus ending the occupation of Oakwood.
Among those involved in the occupation of Oakwood were
Cezari Gonzales and Julius Mesa, both enlisted personnel of
the Philippine Navy. It is in their behalf that the Petition for
Habeas Corpus was filed before the Court of Appeals.
On 2 August 2003, then AFP Chief of Staff Narciso L. Abaya
issued a directive[3] to all Major Service Commanders and to
the Chief of the Intelligence Service of the Armed Forces of the
Philippines (ISAFP) regarding the Custody of Military
Personnel Involved in the 27 July 2003 Mutiny. On the strength
thereof, Gonzales and Mesa were taken into custody by their
Service Commander.
Gonzales and Mesa were not charged before a court martial
with violation of the Articles of War. They were, however,
among the soldiers charged before Branch 61 of the Regional
Trial Court (RTC) of Makati City, with the crime of Coup Detat
as defined under Article 134-A of the Revised Penal Code.
2.
I have read the Petition and caused it to be
prepared. All the contents thereof are true to my own personal
knowledge and the record;
3.
I have not heretofore commenced any action or
proceeding involving the same issues, in the Supreme Court,
the Court of Appeals, or any other tribunal or agency and to the
best of my knowledge, no action or proceeding is pending in
the Supreme Court, the Court of Appeals, or any other tribunal
or agency; except for the related cases of Eugene Gonzales et
al. vs. Gen. Narciso Abaya, et al., G.R. No. 164007 and
Humabono Adaza et al., vs. Gen. Pedro Cabuay et al., G.R.
No. 160792, both awaiting the resolution of the Supreme
Court.
5.
(sic, should be 4) If I should learn of any similar
action or proceeding filed or is pending in the Supreme Court,
the Court of Appeals, or any other tribunal or agency, I
undertake to report such fact within five (5) days therefrom to
this Court.
The present petition and its accompanying certification likewise
show that the petitioner never mentioned the pendency before
the Seventh Division of this Court of the certiorari case, SP
88440, for the annulment of the lower courts order granting the
soldiers-accuseds petition for bail, when this same lower court
order is cited as basis for the immediate release of Gonzales
and Mesa in the present petition. All that the certification
mentioned were the related cases pending before the
Honorable Supreme Court. Neither did the petitioner comply
with his undertaking under his certification to inform this Court
within five (5) days of the pendency of any similar action or
proceeding filed or is pending in the Supreme Court, the Court
of Appeals, or any other tribunal or agency, as in fact the
certiorari case was already pending with this Court when the
present petition was filed. The certiorari case was only brought
to our attention after the respondents filed their Return of the
Writ.
To be sure, the petitioner, who is also the counsel for the
accused Gonzales and Mesa in the criminal case before
Branch 148 RTC Makati City and who represents Gonzales
and Mesa as private respondents in CA-G.R. SP No. 88440,
cannot feign ignorance of the pendency of the certiorari case.
Why he deliberately kept the pendency of the certiorari case
hidden from us, has not been sufficiently explained. We have
no doubt, however, that his deliberate act of withholding
information on a material fact directly required to be disclosed
by the Rules of Court cannot but have legal consequences.
The primary basis of the present petition is the bail granted to
and posted by Gonzales and Mesa. This is very clear from the
petitioners argument that The continued detention of the
enlisted personnel constitutes violation of the lawful orders of
the civilian court. He cited in support of this argument the grant
and the posting of the bail, and the issuance of the release
orders by the lower court. He did not disclose, however, what
subsequently happened to the order granting bail. He
deliberately omitted in his narration the fact that the People
moved to reconsider this order. Thus, he gave the impression
that the order granting bail immediately became enforceable
and that Gonzales and Mesas continued detention is illegal
because their constitutional rights to bail, which have received
judicial imprimatur, were continuously being violated by the
respondents.
The petitioner next omitted the fact that after the denial of its
motion for reconsideration of the order granting bail, the
People filed the certiorari case before this Court, seeking to
annul the lower courts order. While we are aware of the rule
that the mere pendency of a petition for certiorari will not
prevent the implementation of the assailed order unless the
court where the petition was filed issues either a temporary
restraining order or a writ or preliminary injunction the filing of a
petition for habeas corpus while the order granting bail is being
questioned on a petition for certiorari raises issues beyond the
immediate execution of the lower courts bail and release
orders. They raise questions on the propriety of filing the
habeas corpus petition to seek the release of persons under
detention, at the same time that a petition regarding their
continued detention and release are pending. Apparently, the
petitioner wanted to avoid these questions, prompting him to
actively conceal the subsequent motion for reconsideration of
the bail order and the petition for certiorari directly questioning
this same order. In short, the petitioner conveniently omitted in
his narration of facts the material factual antecedents
detrimental to his cause; he chose to narrate only the factual
antecedents favorable to his cause.
That the present petition has direct and intimate links with the
certiorari case is beyond doubt as they involve two sides of the
same coin. The certiorari case filed by the People seeks to
prevent the release of Gonzales and Mesa by annulling the
lower courts grant of bail. The present petition, on the other
hand, was filed in behalf of Gonzales and Mesa to secure their
immediate release because the order granting bail is already
executory. In effect, the petitioner seeks to implement through
a petition for habeas corpus the provisional release from
detention that the lower court has ordered. The question this
immediately raises is: can this be done through a petition for
habeas corpus when the validity of the grant of bail and the
release under bail are live questions before another Division of
this Court?
We believe and so hold that his cannot and should not be done
as this is precisely the reason why the rule against forum
shopping has been put in place. The remedies sought being
two sides of the same coin (i.e., the release of Gonzales and
Mesa), they cannot be secured through separately-filed cases
where issues of jurisdiction may arise and whose rulings may
conflict with one another. To be sure, we clearly heard the
petitioner say that there can be no conflict because the
effectiveness of our ruling in this petition will depend on the
nature and tenor of the ruling in the certiorari case; there is no
basis for a release on habeas corpus if this same Court will
rule in the certiorari case that the grant of bail is improper. For
this very same reason, we should not entertain the present
petition as the matter before us is already before another coequal body whose ruling will be finally determinative of the
issue of Gonzales and Mesas release. The Decision of the
Seventh Division of this Court, heretofore footnoted, ordering
the release on bail of Gonzales and Mesa drives home this
point.
To be strictly accurate, the issues of detention and immediate
release that are now before the two Divisions of this Court are
likewise properly within the jurisdiction of the lower court who
has original jurisdiction over the criminal case and who has
issued the order granting bail in the exercise of this jurisdiction.
If indeed there is a question relating to the immediate release
of Gonzales and Mesa pursuant to the lower courts order
pending the determination of the certiorari issues, such
question should be brought before the lower court as the
tribunal that has ordered the release, or before the Seventh
Division of this Court in the exercise of its supervisory powers
over the lower court. The Decision recently promulgated by the
Seventh Division of this Court ordering the release on bail of
the soldiers-accused effectively demonstrates this point.
The inter-relationships among the criminal case below, the
certiorari case and the present petition, as well as among the
courts where these cases are pending, show beyond doubt
that the petitioner committed forum shopping in the strict sense
of that term i.e., the attempt by a party, after an adverse
opinion in one forum, to seek a favorable opinion in another
forum other that through an appeal or certiorari. The adverse
aspect for the petitioner, while not an opinion, is no less
adverse as he has failed to secure the release of Gonzales
and Mesa before the lower court and before this Court in the
certiorari case (as of the time of the filing of the present
petition); thus, he came to us in the present petition. That the
Seventh Division of this Court has ordered the release on bail
of the soldiers-accused, thus rendering the present petition
moot and academic after the finality of the 7th Division
Decision, plainly demonstrates this legal reality.[18]
The Court further imposed on petitioner the penalty of censure
for the aforesaid violation. The dispositive portion of the
decision reads:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, we hereby DISMISS the
petition for violation of and pursuant to Section 5 Rule 7 of the
Rules of Court. The petitioner, Atty. Roberto Rafael Pulido, is
hereby CENSURED for these violations. Let a copy of this
Decision be furnished the Honorable Supreme Court, to be
attached to the petitioners record as a member of the Bar, as a
RECORD OF CENSURE that may be referred to and
considered in any future similar act.[19]
On 5 September 2005, petitioner filed a Motion for
Reconsideration[20] which the Court of Appeals (Special
Former Third Division) denied in its resolution[21] dated 6
January 2006.
Petitioner is now before us raising the following issues:
WHETHER OR NOT THE HONORABLE COURT OF
APPEALS ERRED IN DISMISSING THE PETITION FOR
HABEAS CORPUS ON THE GROUND OF FORUM
SHOPPING.
A. WHETHER OR NOT THE HONORABLE COURT OF
APPEALS ERRED IN NOT CONSIDERING THE NATURE OF
THE ACTION AND LIMITED ITSELF TO THE ISSUE OF
FORUM SHOPPING.
B. WHETHER OR NOT THE HONORABLE COURT OF
APPEALS ERRED IN IMPOSING UPON PETITIONER THE
PENALTY OF CENSURE.
C. WHETHER OR NOT THE HONORABLE COURT OF
APPEALS ERRED IN NOT PASSING UPON THE EXISTENCE
OR ABSENCE OF VALID GROUNDS TO DETAIN JULIUS
MESA AND CEZARI GONZALES.
Veluz v Villanueva
This is a petition for review1 of the resolutions2 dated February
2, 2005 and September 2, 2005 of the Court of Appeals3 in
CA-G.R. SP No. 88180 denying the petition for habeas corpus
of Eufemia E. Rodriguez, filed by petitioner Edgardo Veluz, as
well as his motion for reconsideration, respectively.
Eufemia E. Rodriguez was a 94-year old widow, allegedly
suffering from a poor state of mental health and deteriorating
cognitive abilities.4 She was living with petitioner, her nephew,
since 2000. He acted as her guardian.
In the morning of January 11, 2005, respondents Luisa R.
Villanueva and Teresita R. Pabello took Eufemia from petitioner
Veluz house. He made repeated demands for the return of
Eufemia but these proved futile. Claiming that respondents
were restraining Eufemia of her liberty, he filed a petition for
habeas corpus5 in the Court of Appeals on January 13, 2005.
The Court of Appeals ruled that petitioner failed to present any
convincing proof that respondents (the legally adopted children
of Eufemia) were unlawfully restraining their mother of her
liberty. He also failed to establish his legal right to the custody
of Eufemia as he was not her legal guardian. Thus, in a
resolution dated February 2, 2005,6 the Court of Appeals
denied his petition.
Petitioner moved for reconsideration but it was also denied.7
Hence, this petition.
Petitioner claims that, in determining whether or not a writ of
habeas corpus should issue, a court should limit itself to
Respondents point out that it was petitioner and his family who
were staying with Eufemia, not the other way around as
petitioner claimed. Eufemia paid for the rent of the house, the
utilities and other household needs.
Sometime in the 1980s, petitioner was appointed as the
"encargado" or administrator of the properties of Eufemia as
well as those left by the deceased Maximo. As such, he took
charge of collecting payments from tenants and transacted
business with third persons for and in behalf of Eufemia and
the respondents who were the only compulsory heirs of the
late Maximo.
In the latter part of 2002, Eufemia and the respondents
demanded an inventory and return of the properties entrusted
to petitioner. These demands were unheeded. Hence, Eufemia
and the respondents were compelled to file a complaint for
estafa against petitioner in the Regional Trial Court of Quezon
City. Consequently, and by reason of their mothers
deteriorating health, respondents decided to take custody of
Eufemia on January 11, 2005. The latter willingly went with
them. In view of all this, petitioner failed to prove either his right
to the custody of Eufemia or the illegality of respondents
action.
We rule for the respondents.
The writ of habeas corpus extends to all cases of illegal
confinement or detention by which any person is deprived of
his liberty or by which the rightful custody of a person is being
withheld from the one entitled thereto.10 It is issued when one
is either deprived of liberty or is wrongfully being prevented
from exercising legal custody over another person.11 Thus, it
contemplates two instances: (1) deprivation of a persons
liberty either through illegal confinement or through detention
and (2) withholding of the custody of any person from someone
entitled to such custody.
In this case, the issue is not whether the custody of Eufemia is
being rightfully withheld from petitioner but whether Eufemia is
being restrained of her liberty. Significantly, although petitioner
admits that he did not have legal custody of Eufemia, he
nonetheless insists that respondents themselves have no right
to her custody. Thus, for him, the issue of legal custody is
irrelevant. What is important is Eufemias personal freedom.
Fundamentally, in order to justify the grant of the writ of habeas
corpus, the restraint of liberty must be in the nature of an illegal
and involuntary deprivation of freedom of action.12
In general, the purpose of the writ of habeas corpus is to
determine whether or not a particular person is legally held. A
prime specification of an application for a writ of habeas
corpus, in fact, is an actual and effective, and not merely
nominal or moral, illegal restraint of liberty. "The writ of habeas
corpus was devised and exists as a speedy and effectual
remedy to relieve persons from unlawful restraint, and as the
best and only sufficient defense of personal freedom. A prime
specification of an application for a writ of habeas corpus is
restraint of liberty. The essential object and purpose of the writ
of habeas corpus is to inquire into all manner of involuntary
Ampatuan v Macaraig
Before this Court is a Petition for Certiorari under Rule 65[1] of
the Rules of Court assailing the Order dated 25 April 2008 of
the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Manila, Branch 37, in Special
Proceeding No. 08-119132 which denied the petition for
Habeas Corpus filed by herein Petitioner Nurhida Juhuri
Ampatuan in behalf of her husband Police Officer 1 Basser B.
Ampatuan[2] (PO1 Ampatuan).
Petitioner alleged in her petition that her husband PO1
Ampatuan was assigned at Sultan Kudarat Municipal Police
Station. On 14 April 2008, he was asked by his Chief of Police
to report to the Provincial Director of Shariff Kabunsuan,
Superintendent Esmael Pua Ali (Supt. Ali). The latter brought
PO1 Ampatuan to Superintendent Piang Adam, Provincial
Director of the Philippine National Police (PNP) Maguindanao.
PO1 Ampatuan was directed to stay at the Police Provincial
Office of Maguindanao without being informed of the cause of
his restraint. The next day, 15 April 2008, PO1 Ampatuan was
brought to the General Santos City Airport and was made to
board a Philippine Airlines plane bound for Manila. Upon
landing at the Manila Domestic Airport, PO1 Ampatuan was
turned over to policemen of Manila and brought to Manila
Mayor Alfredo Lim by Police Director Geary Barias and
General Roberto Rosales. A press briefing was then conducted
where it was announced that PO1 Ampatuan was arrested for
the killing of two Commission on Elections (COMELEC)
Officials. He was then detained at the Police Jail in United
Nations Avenue, Manila. Thereafter, PO1 Ampatuan was
brought to inquest Prosecutor Renato Gonzaga of the Office of
the City Prosecutor of Manila due to the alleged murder of Atty.
Alioden D. Dalaig, head of the Law Department of the
COMELEC. On 20 April 2008, PO1 Ampatuan was turned-over
to the Regional Headquarters Support Group in Camp Bagong
Diwa, Taguig City.[3]
Petitioner continues that on 21 April 2008, Chief Inquest
Prosecutor Nelson Salva ordered the release for further
investigation of PO1 Ampatuan.[4] The Order was approved by
the City Prosecutor of Manila. But Police Senior
Superintendent Co Yee Co, Jr., and Police Chief Inspector
Agapito Quimson refused to release PO1 Ampatuan.
This prompted Petitioner to file the petition for writ of habeas
corpus in the RTC of Manila, Branch 37.[5]
Private respondents had another version of the antecedent
facts. They narrated that at around 7:08 oclock in the evening
of 10 November 2007, a sixty-four-year-old man, later
Adonis v Tesoro
This is a Petition for the Issuance of the Writ of Habeas
Corpus1 under Rule 102 of the 1997 Rules of Court filed by
petitioner Alexander Adonis (Adonis), praying that the Court
directs respondent Superintendent Venancio Tesoro
(respondent), Director of the Davao Prisons and Penal Farm,
to have the body of the former brought before this Court and in
the alternative, praying for the application of the Supreme
Court Administrative Circular No. 08-2008,2 which imposes the
penalty of a fine instead of imprisonment in Criminal Case No.
48679-2001.3
Antecedent Facts
In Criminal Case No. 48679-2001, Adonis was convicted by the
Regional Trial Court of Davao City (RTC), Branch 17 for Libel,
filed against him by then Representative Prospero Nograles.
He was sentenced to an indeterminate sentence of five (5)
months and one (1) day of arresto mayor maximum, as
minimum penalty, to four (4) years, six (6) months and one (1)
day of prision correccional medium, as maximum penalty.4 He
began serving his sentence at the Davao Prisons and Penal
Farm on February 20, 2007.
A second libel case, docketed as Criminal Case No. 487192001 was likewise filed against Adonis by Jeanette L. Leuterio,
pending before the RTC of Davao City, Branch 14.6
Lamen v Director
Availing of our decision in People vs. Simon, 1 the petitioners
filed the instant petition to secure the release of Willy Bagawe
y Pagalla, who was earlier convicted of the violation of Section
4, Article II of R.A. No. 6425, 2 as amended, for selling and
delivering marijuana and sentenced to suffer the penalty of life
imprisonment and to pay a fine of P20,000.00. The prohibited
drugs involved consist of three matchboxes containing
marijuana flowering tops with a total weight of 3.5 grams, one
matchbox with a marijuana cigarette butt, and one brown paper
bag containing 10 grams of marijuana flowering tops. 3
In our decision of 7 April 1992, 4 we affirmed in toto the
aforesaid judgment of the trial court. 5 Our decision became
final on 11 May 1992. 6
Willy Bagawe y Pagalla is presently serving his sentence in the
New Bilibid Prisons in Muntinglupa, Metro Manila. He has been
under incarceration since his arrest on 14 April 1987.
The petitioners contend that since the gross quantity of the
marijuana involved in this case is only 13.6 grams, then in the
light of People vs. Simon, the maximum term imposed on
Bagawe should be reduced to two (2) years, four (4) months
and one (1) day of prision correccional; and since he has
already served more than six years, he should be released
from imprisonment.
In its comment, the Office of the Solicitor General agrees with
the petitioners that Simon should apply but disagrees with their
computation of the maximum penalty. It recommends that,
following the penalties imposed by us in Simon and in People
vs. Saycon, 7 the proper penalty should be six (6) months of
arresto mayor as minimum to six (6) years of prision
correccional as maximum, without fine.
Article 22 of the Revised Penal Code operates to benefit Willy
Bagawe since R.A. No. 7659, is favorable to him and since he
is not a habitual criminal.
Following Simon, the penalty which could have been imposed
on Willy Bagawe under R.A. No. 6425, as further amended by
R.A. No. 7659, would have been prision correccional and, after
applying the Indeterminate Sentence Law, he would have been
sentenced to an indeterminate penalty ranging from six (6)
months of arresto mayor, as minimum, to four (4) years and
two (2) months of prision correccional as maximum.
Since the decision in G.R. Nos. 88515-16 had long become
final and Willy Bagawe is in fact serving his sentence, we
cannot alter or modify the penalty therein imposed.
Nevertheless, the writ of habeas corpus comes to his rescue
since he has undergone imprisonment for a period more than
the maximum imprisonment which could have been properly
imposed on him taking into account the favorable statute, R.A.
No. 7659. In the 1932 case of Directo vs. Director of Prisons, 8
we ruled:
In view of the foregoing considerations we are of the opinion
and hold: (1) that Article 22 of the Revised Penal Code which
makes penal provisions retroactive so far as they favor the
accused, provided he is not a habitual criminal, does not
authorize a court whose sentence has become final and
executory to make a substantial amendment, and any
amendment made in such sentence, though it be to give effect
to a penal provision favorable to the accused, would be null
and void for lack of jurisdiction; and (2) that the only means of
Lansang v Garcia
In the evening of August 21, 1971, at about 9 p.m., while the
Liberal Party of the Philippines was holding a public meeting at
Plaza Miranda, Manila, for the presentation of its candidates in
the general elections scheduled for November 8, 1971, two (2)
hand grenades were thrown, one after the other, at the
platform where said candidates and other persons were. As a
consequence, eight (8) persons were killed and many more
injured, including practically all of the aforementioned
candidates, some of whom sustained extensive, as well as
serious, injuries which could have been fatal had it not been for
the timely medical assistance given to them.
On August 23, soon after noontime, the President of the
Philippines announced the issuance of Proclamation No. 889,
dated August 21, 1971, reading as follows:
WHEREAS, on the basis of carefully evaluated information, it
is definitely established that lawless elements in the country,
which are moved by common or similar ideological conviction,
design and goal and enjoying the active moral and material
support of a foreign power and being guided and directed by a
well trained, determined and ruthless group of men and taking
advantage of our constitutional liberties to promote and attain
their ends, have entered into a conspiracy and have in fact
joined and banded their forces together for the avowed
purpose of actually staging, undertaking and waging an armed
insurrection and rebellion in order to forcibly seize political
power in this country, overthrow the duly constituted
government, and supplant our existing political social,
economic and legal order with an entirely new one whose form
of government, whose system of laws, whose conception of
God and religion, whose notion of individual rights and family
relations, and whose political, social and economic precepts
are based on the Marxist-Leninist-Maoist teachings and
beliefs;
6.
ANGELO DE LOS REYES, who was allowed on
August 30, 1971 to intervene as one of the petitioners in
Cases Nos. L-33964, L-33965 and L-33973, he having been
arrested by members of the Constabulary on August 22, 1971,
between 6:30 and 7:30 p.m., in his residence, at 86 Don
Manuel Street, Sta. Mesa Heights, Quezon City, and brought to
Camp Crame, Quezon City, where he is detained and
restrained of liberty;
8.
TERESITO SISON, who was, also, allowed to
intervene as one of the petitioners in the same three (3) cases,
he having been arrested in his residence, at 318 Lakandula
St., Angeles City, on August 22, 1971, between 6 and 7 p.m.,
and taken to the PC offices at Sto. Domingo, Angeles City, then
to Camp Olivas, San Fernando, Pampanga, and eventually to
Camp Crame, Quezon City, where he is restrained and
deprived of liberty;
7.
VICTOR FELIPE, who was similarly allowed to
intervene as one of the petitioners in said three (3) cases, upon
the ground that, on August 23, 1971, at about 8 a.m., he was,
likewise, apprehended at Sta. Rosa, Laguna, by members of
the Philippine Constabulary and brought, first to the
Constabulary headquarters at Canlubang, Laguna, and, then,
to Camp Crame, Quezon City, where he is detained and
restrained of liberty;
9.
GERARDO TOMAS, alias Gerry Tomas, a 17-year old
second year college students of St. Louis University, Baguio
Jr., the petitioner therein, had been and is detained "on the
basis of a reasonable ground to believe that he has committed
overt acts in furtherance of rebellion or insurrection against the
government" and, accordingly, "comes within the class of
persons as to whom the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus
has been suspended by Proclamation No. 889, as amended,"
the validity of which is not contested by him.
On August 30, 1971, the President issued Proclamation No.
889-A, amending Proclamation No. 889, so as to read as
follows:
WHEREAS, on the basis of carefully evaluated information, it
is definitely established that lawless elements in the country,
which are moved by common or similar ideological conviction,
design and goal and enjoying the active moral and material
support of a foreign power and being guided and directed by a
well-trained, determined and ruthless group of men and taking
advantage of our constitutional liberties to promote and attain
their ends, have entered into a conspiracy and have in fact
joined and banded their forces together for the avowed
purpose of [actually] staging, undertaking, [and] wagging and
are actually engaged in an armed insurrection and rebellion in
order to forcibly seize political power in this country, overthrow
the duly constituted government, and supplant our existing
political, social, economic and legal order with an entirely new
one whose form of government, whose system of laws, whose
conception of God and religion, whose notion of individual
rights and family relations, and whose political, social and
economic precepts are based on the Marxist-Leninist-Maoist
teaching and beliefs;
WHEREAS, these lawless elements, acting in concert through
front organizations that are seemingly innocent and harmless,
have continuously and systematically strengthened and
broadened their memberships through sustained and careful
recruiting and enlistment of new adherents from among our
peasantly, laborers, professionals, intellectuals, students, and
mass media personnel, and through such sustained and
careful recruitment and enlistment have succeeded in
infiltrating almost every segment of our society in their
ceaseless determination to erode and weaken the political,
social, economic and moral foundations of our existing
government and influence many peasant, labor, professional,
intellectual, student and mass media organizations to commit
acts of violence and depredations against our duly constituted
authorities, against the members of our law enforcement
agencies, and worst of all, against the peaceful members of
our society;
WHEREAS, these lawless elements, by their acts of rebellion
and insurrection, have created a state of lawlessness and
disorder affecting public safety and security of the State, the
latest manifestation of which has been the dastardly attack on
the Liberal Party rally in Manila on August 21, 1971, which has
resulted in the death and serious injury of scores of persons;
WHEREAS, public safety requires that immediate and effective
action be taken in order to maintain peace and order, secure
the safety of the people and preserve the authority of the State;
NOW THEREFORE, I, FERDINAND E. MARCOS, President of
the Philippines, by virtue of the powers vested upon me by
Article VII, Section 10, Paragraph (2) of the Constitution, do
hereby suspend the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus for
the persons presently detained, as well as all others who may
be hereafter similarly detained for the crimes of insurrection or
rebellion [,] and [all] other [crimes and offenses] overt acts
committed by them in furtherance [or on the occasion]
thereof[,]. [or incident thereto, or in connection therewith.] 1
On September 1, 1971, Cases Nos. L-33964, L-33965, L33973 and L-33982 were jointly heard and then the parties
therein were allowed to file memoranda, which were submitted
from September 3 to September 9, 1971.
Soon thereafter, or on September 18, 1971, Proclamation No.
889 was further amended by Proclamation No. 889-B, lifting
the suspension of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus in
a.
That the offense was committed in contempt of and
with insult to the public authorities;
b.
That some of the overt acts were committed in the
Palace of the Chief Executive;
c.
d.
men;
e.
That the offense was committed with the aid of
persons under fifteen(15) years old.
Identical allegations are made in the complaint filed with the
City Fiscal of Quezon City, except that the second paragraph
thereof is slightly more elaborate than that of the complaint
filed with the CFI, although substantially the same. 26
In both complaints, the acts imputed to the defendants herein
constitute rebellion and subversion, of in the language of the
proclamation "other overt acts committed ... in furtherance"
of said rebellion, both of which are covered by the
proclamation suspending the privilege of the writ. It is clear,
therefore, that the crime for which the detained petitioners are
held and deprived of their liberty are among those for which the
privilege of the writ of habeas corpus has been suspended.
Up to this point, the Members of the Court are unanimous on
the legal principles enunciated.
After finding that Proclamation No. 889, as amended, is not
invalid and that petitioners Luzvimindo David, Victor Felipe,
Gary Olivar, Angelo de los Reyes, Rodolfo del Rosario and
Teresito Sison are detained for and actually accused of an
offense for which the privilege of the writ has been suspended
by said proclamation, our next step would have been the
following: The Court, or a commissioner designated by it,
would have received evidence on whether as stated in
respondents' "Answer and Return" said petitioners had been
apprehended and detained "on reasonable belief" that they
had "participated in the crime of insurrection or rebellion."
It is so happened, however, that on November 13, 1971 or
two (2) days before the proceedings relative to the briefing held
on October 28 and 29, 1971, had been completed by the filing
27 of the summary of the matters then taken up the
aforementioned criminal complaints were filed against said
petitioners. What is more, the preliminary examination and/or
investigation of the charges contained in said complaints has
already begun. The next question, therefore, is: Shall We now
order, in the cases at hand, the release of said petitioners
herein, despite the formal and substantial validity of the
proclamation suspending the privilege, despite the fact that
they are actually charged with offenses covered by said
proclamation and despite the aforementioned criminal
complaints against them and the preliminary examination
and/or investigations being conducted therein?
The Members of the Court, with the exception of Mr. Justice
Fernando, are of the opinion, and, so hold, that, instead of this
Court or its Commissioner taking the evidence adverted to
above, it is best to let said preliminary examination and/or
investigation to be completed, so that petitioners' released
could be ordered by the court of first instance, should it find
that there is no probable cause against them, or a warrant for
their arrest could be issued, should a probable cause be
established against them. Such course of action is more
favorable to the petitioners, inasmuch as the preliminary
examination or investigation requires a greater quantum of
proof than that needed to establish that the Executive had not
acted arbitrary in causing the petitioners to be apprehended
and detained upon the ground that they had participated in the
commission of the crime of insurrection or rebellion. And, it is
mainly for the reason that the Court has opted to allow the
Court of First Instance of Rizal to proceed with the
determination of the existence of probable cause, although
ordinarily the Court would have merely determined the
existence of the substantial evidence of petitioners' connection