151677-1948-Sayo v. Chief of Police
151677-1948-Sayo v. Chief of Police
151677-1948-Sayo v. Chief of Police
SYLLABUS
14. ID.; ID.; ID.; FAILURE OF CITY FISCAL TO FILE INFORMATION WITHIN
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PRESCRIBED PERIOD; CONTINUED DETENTION OF ARRESTED PERSON. If the city
fiscal does not file the information within the period of six hours prescribed by law and
the arresting officer continues holding the prisoner beyond the six-hour period, the
fiscal will not be responsible for violation of said article 125, because he is not the one
who has arrested and illegally detained the person arrested, unless he has ordered or
induced the arresting officer to hold and not release the prisoner after the expiration of
said period.
15. ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; CITY FISCAL WITHOUT POWER TO ORDER
DETENTION OF ARRESTED PERSON UNDER SECTION 2460 OF REVISED
ADMINISTRATIVE CODE. Section 2460 of the Revised Administrative Code which
specifies the powers and duties of the chief of police of Manila and authorizes the
latter "to take good and sufficient bail for the appearance before the city court of any
person arrested for violation of any city ordinance: Provided, however, That he shall not
exercise this power in cases of violation of any penal law except when the fiscal of the
city shall so recommend and fix the bail to be required of the person arrested," do not
authorize, either expressly or by implication, the city fiscal to order the detention of the
prisoner if bond is not given, not only because they refer to the powers of the chief of
police of Manila and not of the city fiscal, but because the only incidental authority
granted to the latter is to recommend the granting of the bail by the chief of police and
to fix the amount of bail to be required of the person arrested for violation of any penal
law in order that the chief of police may release the latter on bail.
16. ID.; ARREST WITHOUT WARRANT; LAWS IN FORCE. Section 2463 of
the Revised Administrative Code and section 6 of Rule 109 of the Rules of Court are the
only provisions of law in force in these Islands which enumerate the cases in which a
peace officer may arrest a person without warrant, and the so called common law
relating to other cases of arrest without warrant has no application in this jurisdiction.
"The right to make arrests without a warrant is usually regulated by express statute, and
except as authorized by such statutes, an arrest without a warrant is illegal." (5 C. J., pp.
395, 396.) And statutory construction extending the right to make arrest without a
warrant beyond the cases provided by law is derogatory of the right of the people to
personal liberty (4 Am. Jur., p. 17).
DECISION
FERIA , J : p
Upon complaint of one Bernardino Malinao, charging the petitioners with having
committed the crime of robbery, Benjamin Dumlao, a policeman of the City of Manila,
arrested the petitioners on April 2, 1948, and presented a complaint against them with
the scal's of ce of Manila. Until April 7, 1948, when the petition for habeas corpus
led with this Court was heard, the petitioners were still detained or under arrest, and
the city scal had not yet released or led against them an information with the proper
courts of justice.
This case has not been decided before this time because there was not a
suf cient number of Justices to form a quorum in Manila, and it had to be transferred
to the Supreme Court acting in division here in Baguio for deliberation and decision. We
have not until now an of cial information as to the action taken by the of ce of the city
scal on the complaint led by Dumlao against the petitioners. But whatever might
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have been the action taken by said of ce, if there was any, we have to decide this case
in order to lay down a ruling on the question involved herein for the information and
guidance in the future of the officers concerned.
The principal question to be determined in the present case in order to decide
whether or not the petitioners are being illegally restrained of their liberty, is the
following: Is the city scal of Manila a judicial authority within the meaning of the
provisions of article 125 of the Revised Penal Code?
Article 125 of the Revised Penal Code provides that "the penalties provided in the
next preceding article shall be imposed upon the public of cer or employee who shall
detain any person for some legal ground and shall fail to deliver such person to the
proper judicial authorities within the period of six hours."
Taking into consideration the history of the provisions of the above quoted
article, the precept of our Constitution guaranteeing individual liberty, and the
provisions of Rules of Court regarding arrest and habeas corpus, we are of the opinion
that the words "judicial authority", as used in said article, mean the courts of justices or
judges of said courts vested with judicial power to order the temporary detention or
con nement of a person charged with having committed a public offense, that is, "the
Supreme Court and such inferior courts as may be established by law". (Section 1,
Article VIII of the Constitution.).
Article 125 of the Revised Penal Code was substantially taken from article 202 of
the old Penal Code formerly in force in these Islands, which penalized a public of cer
other than a judicial officer who, without warrant, "shall arrest a person upon a charge of
crime and shall fail to deliver such person to the judicial authority within twenty four
hours after his arrest." There was no doubt that the judicial authority therein referred to
was the judge of a court of justice empowered by law, after a proper investigation, to
order the temporary commitment or detention of the person arrested; and not the city
scals or any other of cers, who are not authorized by law to do so. Because article
204, which complements said section 202, of the same Code provided that "the penalty
of suspension in its minimum and medium degrees shall be imposed upon the
following persons: 1. Any judicial of cer who, within the period prescribed by the
provisions of the law of criminal procedure in force, shall fail to release any prisoner
under arrest or to commit such prisoner formally by written order containing a
statement of the grounds upon which the same is based."
Although the above quoted provision of article 204 of the old Penal Code has not
been incorporated in the Revised Penal Code the import of said words judicial authority
or of cer can not be construed as having been modi ed by the mere omission of said
provision in the Revised Penal Code.
Besides, section 1(3), Article III, of our Constitution provides that "the right of the
people to be secure in their persons . . . against unreasonable seizure shall not be
violated, and no warrant [of arrest, detention or con nement] shall issue but upon
probable cause, to be determined by the judge after examination under oath or
af rmation of the complainant and the witness he may produce." Under this
constitutional precept no person may be deprived of his liberty, except by warrant of
arrest or commitment issued upon probable cause by a judge after examination of the
complainant and his witness. And the judicial authority to whom a person arrested by a
public of cer must be surrendered can not be any other but a court or judge who alone
is authorized to issue a warrant of commitment or provisional detention of the person
arrested pending the trial of the case against the latter. Without such warrant of
commitment, the detention of the person arrested for more than six hours would be
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illegal and in violation of our Constitution.
Our conclusion is con rmed by section 17, Rule 109 of the Rules of Court, which,
referring to the duty of an of cer after arrest without warrant, provides that "a person
making arrest for legal ground shall, without unnecessary delay, and within the time
prescribed in the Revised Penal Code, take the person arrested to the proper court or
judge for such action as they may deem proper to take ;" and by section 11 of Rule 108,
which reads that "after the arrest by the defendant and his delivery to the Court, he shall
be informed of the complaint or information led against him. He shall also be
informed of the substance of the testimony and evidence presented against him, and, if
he desires to testify or to present witnesses or evidence in his favor, he may be allowed
to do so. The testimony of the witnesses need not be reduced to writing but that of the
defendant shall be taken in writing and subscribed by him."
And it is further corroborated by the provisions of sections 1 and 4, Rule 102 of
the Rules of Court. According to the provisions of said section, "a writ of habeas corpus
shall extend to all cases of illegal con nement or detention by which any person is
illegally deprived of his liberty"; and "if it appears that the person alleged to be
restrained of his liberty is in the custody of an of cer under process issued by a court
or judge, or by virtue of a judgment or order of a court of record, and that the court or
judge had jurisdiction to issue the process, render judgment, or make the order, the writ
shall not be allowed." Which a contrario sensu means that, otherwise, the writ shall be
allowed and the person detained shall be released.
The judicial authority mentioned in section 125 of the Revised Penal Code can
not be construed to include the scal of the City of Manila or any other city, because
they cannot issue a warrant of arrest or of commitment or temporary con nement of a
person surrendered to legalize the detention of a person arrested without warrant.
(Section 7, Rule 108; Hashin vs. Boncan, 40 Off. Gaz. 13th Suppl., p. 13; Lino vs. Fugoso,
L-1159, promulgated on January 30, 1947, 43 Off. Gaz., 1214). The investigation which
the city scal of Manila makes is not the preliminary investigation proper provided for
in section 11, Rule 108, above quoted, to which all persons charged with offenses
cognizable by the Court of First Instance in provinces are entitled, but it is a mere
investigation made by the city scal for the purpose of ling the corresponding
information against the defendant with the proper municipal court or Court of First
Instance of Manila if the result of the investigation so warrants, in order to obtain or
secure from the court a warrant of arrest of the defendant. It is provided by law as a
substitute, in a certain sense, of the preliminary investigation proper to avoid or prevent
a hasty or malicious prosecution, since defendants charged with offenses triable by the
courts in the City of Manila are not entitled to a proper preliminary investigation.
Separate Opinions
PERFECTO , J., concurring :
That a scal is not a judicial authority has been unmistakably declared in the
decision in Lino vs. Fugoso, L-1159, 43 Off. Gaz., 1214. The statement made therein
that there was yet no purpose of deciding whether a scal is a judicial authority or not,
is just a rhetorical gure that should not deceive any one. All those who can read, will
nd that the decision has made the declaration. It is there stated in plain language that
the fiscal is "unlike" a judicial authority.
"Unlike" means, as an elementary school student knows, not like, dissimilar,
diverse, different.
No warrant of arrest having been issued by any competent tribunal for the
apprehension of petitioners, said apprehension appears to be illegal.
At any rate, even under the hypothesis that it was legal and continued to be so for
six hours, this time having expired several days ago, the continued detention and
con nement of petitioners is clearly illegal, and not only illegal but criminal, involving an
offense committed by public officers and heavily punished by the Revised Penal Code.
Regarding the question as to legality of the arrest, counsel for respondents has
advanced the shocking theory that police of cers may arrest any person just for
questioning or investigation, without any warrant of arrest.
The theory is absolutely unconstitutional and could have been entertained only
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under the "Kempei" system implanted by the brutal Japanese army of occupation. Such
a theory represents an ideology incompatible with human dignity. Reason revolts
against it.
Respondents are ordered, upon notice of the decision, to immediately release the
two petitioners and to report to this Court the time when the release shall have been
effected.
I dissent on the grounds stated in my dissent in Lino vs. Fugoso et al., Off. Gaz.,
1214.
RESOLUTION
August 27, 1948
FERIA , J : p
This is a motion for reconsideration of our decision which holds that the phrase
"judicial authority" used in article 125 of the Revised Penal Code, to whom a person
arrested without warrant shall be delivered by the of cer making the arrest within the
period of six hours from the arrest, means a competent court or judge, and the City
Fiscal is not such a judicial authority.
We have already held, in the United States vs. Fortaleza, 12 Phil., 472, 477-479,
that the provisions of the Provisional Law for the application of the provisions of the
Spanish Penal Code in the Philippines by Royal Decree of September 4, 1884, are in
force in these Islands in so far as they have not been repealed or amended by
implication by the enactment of the body of laws put in force in these Islands since the
change from Spanish to American sovereignty. According to the ruling of this court in
said case, a person may be arrested without warrant in the cases speci ed in Rules 27
and 28 of said provisional law and section 37 of Act No. 183 (Charter of Manila). The
provisions of said Rules 27 and 28 are substantially the same as those contained in
section 6 Rule 109 of the Rules of Court which superseded them; and the provisions of
section 37 of Act No. 183 above referred to have been incorporated in section 2463 of
the Revised Administrative Code. Both section 6 of Rule 109, and the pertinent
provisions of said section 2463 of the Revised Administrative Code are now the laws in
force on the subject.
Article 30 of said Provisional Law for the application of the Penal Law in the
Philippines also provides:
"The executive authorities or the agents detaining a person shall release
the same or else turn him over to the judicial authorities within twenty four hours
after the arrest if made in the head town of the district, or within as brief a period
as the distance and transportation facilities permit."
And the next article 31 of the same law reads as follows:
"Within twenty four hours after the person arrested has been surrendered to
the competent judge of Court of First Instance, the latter shall order the
commitment or release of the prisoner by a warrant containing the grounds on
which it is based (auto motivado).
"If it is impossible to do so because of the complexity of the facts, the
number of defendants or any other serious cause, which must be made of record,
the time of detention may be extended to three days. Upon the expiration of that
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period of time the judge shall order the commitment or the release of the
defendant. The warrant of commitment shall be ratified after the defendant has
been heard within the period of sixty two hours from the time the defendant has
been committed to prison."
Said Rule 30 has been modi ed by section 17, Rule 109, which provides that "Any
person making arrest for legal ground shall, without unnecessary delay and within the
time prescribed in the Revised Penal Code, take the person arrested to the proper court
or judge for such action as they may deem proper to take," and by article 125 of the
Revised Penal Code already quoted.
But the provisions of Rule 31 above quoted are still in force because they have
not been repealed, either expressly or by implication, by any law or the present Rules of
Court, except the last sentence, thereof which is no longer in force. The procedure of
hearing the accused after he has been committed to prison referred to in said last
sentence, is a sort of preliminary investigation by the judge or justice of the peace
according to the present procedure. Persons arrested or accused in the City of Manila
are not entitled to such investigation. In provinces the justice of the peace or judge
shall, according to section 2 of Act No. 194, "make the preliminary investigation of the
charge as speedily as may be consistent with the right and justice, but in any event he
must make the investigation within three days of the time the accused was brought
before him, unless the accused or complainant shall ask for delay in order that
witnesses may be obtained, or for other good and suf cient reason, in which event a
continuance for a reasonable time may be allowed." This provision of section 2 of Act
No. 194 is still in force, because no law has been enacted amending or repealing it.
(Marcos vs. Cruz [May 13, 1939] 1st Supp., 40, Off. Gaz., 174, 182.) The Rules of Court
on Criminal Procedure do not undertake to dispose of all subjects of preliminary
investigation, and repeal all laws on the subject not incorporated therein; specially
those that, like the said provisions of section 2, Act No. 194, confer substantive rights
upon defendants which can not be diminished, increased or modi ed by the Rules of
Court (section 13, Article VIII, of the Constitution).
In view of the provisions of section 17, Rule 109, Rule 31 of the Provisional Law,
article 204 of the old Penal Code, from which article 125 of the Revised Penal Code was
taken, and section 1(3) Article III of the Constitution, there can be no doubt that the
judicial authority within the meaning of article 125 of the Revised Penal Code must be a
judge who has authority to issue a written warrant of commitment or release containing
the ground on which it is based (auto motivado). Because said section 17 of Rule 109
expressly provides that the of cer making the arrest without warrant shall, within the
time prescribed in the Revised Penal Code, take the person arrested to a court or judge
for such action as the latter may deem proper to take; Rule 31 expressly states that,
within twenty four hours or at most three days after the person arrested has been
delivered to the judge of Court of First Instance (and also the justice of the peace now),
the latter shall order the commitment or release of the prisoner, by a warrant containing
the ground upon which the commitment or release is based (auto motivado); article
204 of the old Penal Code (not incorporated in the Revised Penal Code), penalize the
judicial authority or judge who fails to comply with the provisions of said Rule 31; and
section 1(3) Article III of the Constitution provides that no warrant shall issue but upon
probable cause, to be determined by the judge after examination under oath or af davit
of the complainant and witnesses he may produce," in order to safeguard "the right of
the people to be secured in their person . . . against unreasonable seizure" or detention
for a longer period than that xed or considered by law as reasonable (six hours
according to section 125 of the Revised Penal Code).
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It is obvious that the city scal is not a judge, and has no power to issue order of
commitment or release by a written warrant containing the ground on which it is based.
As a matter of fact the city scal has never exercised such power since that of ce was
created. In justice to the city scal, we have to state that the latter did not and does not
contend in his motion for reconsideration that it has the power to issue such a warrant,
as contended in the dissenting opinion.
To consider a city scal as a judicial authority within the meaning of article 125
of the Revised Penal Code, would be to place a person arrested in provinces without
warrant in a better position than those arrested in the City of Manila. Because, as there
is no law requiring the city scal to act or le an information against such person within
a limited period of time, after the arresting of cer has taken the prisoner to the city
scal within six hours, the prisoner may be held under detention without any warrant for
days and weeks and possibly months until such time as the city scal may take action,
either by releasing the prisoner without ling any information, or ling an information
with the proper city court and obtain a warrant of commitment. While a person arrested
outside of the City of Manila has to be delivered by the arresting person or peace
of cer to the competent judge within six hours after his arrest, and the latter shall have
to investigate the charge and issue a warrant of release or commitment of the prisoner
within the period of twenty four hours or at most three days prescribed in said article
31 of the Provisional Law.
We agree with the above resolution except that which may be at variance with our
concurring opinion in this case and with our written opinion in the case of Lino vs.
Fugoso, L-1159, 43 Off. Gaz., 1214.
But this is only a poor alternative. Regardless of any vigilance on his part the
opportunity for the city scal to make the required investigation cannot always be
assured. The law gives the police absolute power to detain a prisoner for six hours
without incurring penal liability. There is no law which obliges the police to take the
prisoner to the city scal before the expiration of six hours from the time of arrest.
There can be cases where the entire six hours might be consumed by the police in their
investigation alone, or just in the chasing, collection and transportation to the police
station of law breakers. This can happen in tumultuous and other mob offenses in
which many people are involved and there is necessity of screening the guilty ones.
Supposing then that the police should deliver the prisoner or prisoners to the city
scal at the last minute of the six hours through negligence or by force of
circumstances, what time is there for this functionary to comply with his duty? And
even if the city scal be given the chance to start his assigned task at the beginning of
the six hour period, can this time insure proper and just investigation in complicated
cases and in cases where the persons arrested are numerous and witnesses are not on
hand to testify? It is well to remember that the police are not authorized to round up
witnesses and take them along with the prisoners to the city fiscal.
In the light of these consequences I can not imagine that the meaning which this
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Court attaches to article 125 of the Revised Penal Code so much as entered the
thought of the legislature. No sound-minded legislature could have intended to create
such a situation, which is easy to perceive unless we assume that the legislative
purpose was to tie up the hands of the law and give lawlessness full sway; unless the
legislature wanted to coddle and pamper lawless elements to a calamitous extreme.
When the Court says that the prisoner, after being released at the end of six hours from
the time of his arrest may be rearrested should the city scal nd suf cient evidence
and prefer charges against him, it takes for granted that underworld characters and
hardened criminals are honorable men who would keep themselves ready and handy for
a second arrest.
The Court says:
"To consider the city fiscal as the judicial authority referred to in article 125
of the Revised Penal Code, would be to authorize the detention of a person
arrested without warrant for a period longer than that permitted by law without
any process issued by a court of competent jurisdiction. The city fiscal may not,
after due investigation, find sufficient ground for filing an information or
prosecuting the person arrested and release him, after the latter had been illegally
detained for days or weeks without any process issued by a court or judge."
What is that "proper process" referred to in the above-quoted portion of the
decision? Whatever is meant by "proper process," we should note that there is no
fundamental difference between the proceeding before a justice of the peace and the
procedure followed by the city scal. There is nothing important the justice of the
peace may do in the interest of the accused in the cases triable before the Court of
First Instance which the city scal may not do. If the city scal can not issue an order of
arrest, the justice of the peace himself does not do so to give the detention the stamp
of legality. At least, I am aware of no law which tells him to take this step, and I can see
no material advantage which an accused could derive from this ceremony. All the
justice of the peace does which matters to the accused is admit him to bail, if the crime
be bailable, and proceed to an investigation.
But the city scal does just that; and if it be necessary to order the commitment
of the prisoner pending ascertainment of his guilt, the city scal no less than the justice
of the peace or judge of rst instance has that authority also, as I propose to show
later. In actual practice, a person arrested without warrant in a regular municipality
frequently suffers greater injustice and is subject to, and frequently goes through,
greater hardships than his counterpart in the City of Manila. We are witness to the
common spectacle of cases being dismissed on motion of the provincial scal for
want of suf cient evidence after the prisoner had been bound by the justice of the
peace over to the Court of First Instance for trial and after he had languished in jail for
months or years. Prisoner's detention in that case is not considered illegal.
This anomaly seldom takes place in cities where the preliminary investigation is
entrusted to the city scal. Rarely in the City of Manila is a case dropped for
insuf ciency of evidence after it has been determined in a preliminary investigation that
the prisoner should be held for trial. On the whole, the method by which the preliminary
investigation is conducted by the prosecuting attorney is more conducive to ef ciency,
minimizes or eliminates con icts of opinion in the existence of probable cause, and
better insures prompt dispatch of criminal cases to the lasting bene t of the prisoner.
Only physical impossibility, as I understand it, is in the way for the adoption of this
method throughout the country.
It is a mistake, in my humble judgment, to confuse a prisoner's detention during
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the six-hour period xed in article 125 of the Revised Penal Code and his continued
detention after he is turned over to the city scal. As I have said, article 125 regulates
the time within which a police of cer may hold the prisoner under his responsibility, and
it applies to the police alone. It will hardly be contended that this article, or any other
law, or the constitution limits the period within which a prisoner may be detained after
he is delivered to the justice of the peace. If that is so, and since the city scal acts in
lieu of a justice of the peace, there is no sound basis, legal or practical, for denying to
the former the same time and the same freedom of action that is enjoyed by the latter.
By the same token, there is no sound reason for denying to the proceeding by the
city scal the same attributes which adhere to the proceeding before the justice of the
peace. After the arresting of cer produced the prisoner before the city scal, the law
takes its course in the same manner that it does when the examining of cer is the
justice of the peace or judge of rst instance. From that time the arresting of cer
ceases to have any control over the prisoner save to keep him in custody subject to the
orders of the city scal. The police step out and the law steps in and extends to the
prisoner the mantle of protection against inquisitory examination by the police. From
that time on he enjoys the rights granted by law to all accused persons the right to
give bail and the right to testify freely unin uenced by any fear of violence or other
forms of maltreatment. The danger envisioned by article 125 of the Revised Penal Code
is past.
The proceeding before the city scal does not lose its character of due process
of law by its being conducted by the city scal instead of a judge. For one thing,
preliminary investigation is not a trial. It is not a constitutional right. It is purely a matter
of statutory regulation. (Potenciana Dequito vs. Hugo O. Arellano et al., G. R. No. L-1336;
32 C. J. S., 456.) A judicial proceeding which lies within the power of the legislature to
provide or withhold without infringing the fundamental law may be placed in the hands
of any officer other than a judge.
The jurisdiction to make a preliminary examination or investigation is not even
considered judicial. Judges who perform this function do not do so as judicial of cers.
Municipal executives here and in the United States are conferred this power. "The power
to examine and to commit persons charged with crime is not judicial, but is one of the
duties of the conservators of the peace, and it may be, and usually is, vested in persons
other than courts, as, for instance, justices of the peace or police magistrates, or
persons exercising jurisdiction analogous to that exercised by justices of the peace, or
who are ex of cio justices of the peace, such as mayors, notaries public, or court
commissioners, Power to hold preliminary examinations may be exercised by United
States commissioners, and United States district judges who, while making the
preliminary examination, exercise the powers of commissioners only." (16 C. J., 319-
320.)
There is no basis for the fear that "the city scal may not, after due investigation,
nd suf cient ground for ling an information or prosecuting the person arrested and
release him, after the latter had been illegally detained for days or weeks without any
process issued by a court or judge." This statement overlooks the consistent and
general practice heretofore followed with clear, express statutory sanction. Section
2460 of the Revised Administrative Code authorizes the chief of police of the City of
Manila "to take good and suf cient bail for the appearance before the city court of any
person arrested for violation of any city ordinance," while in cases of violation of any
penal law, according to the same article, the scal of the city may, and does,
recommend and x the bail to be required of the person arrested. Power to x bail
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necessarily implies power to recommend or order the detention of the prisoner if bond
is not given. This in its working is no more nor less than the power to commit an
accused to prison pending investigation of this case, power which the majority
erroneously say is not possessed by the city fiscal.
The constitutional and statutory provisions and rules cited by the majority are of
general application which are good only in the absence of speci c enactments. The
controlling provisions in the case at bar are sections 2460 and 2465 of the Revised
Administrative Code and section 2, Rule 108, of the Rules of Court.
When I led my dissent from the decision of the Court on the occasion of the
denial of the motion for reconsideration, it was my understanding that there was going
to be only a minute resolution. I make this remark not as a complaint but as my
explanation for writing my dissent in advance of the reasoned resolution. Even then I
would contend myself with resting my dissent on what I have already stated did not the
resolution contain new propositions to be answered and disclose misunderstanding of
some of my statements to be cleared. As this is in the nature of reply, topics will be
treated without regard to continuity of thought.
The resolution says that article 30 of the Provisional Law for the Application of
the Penal Code in the Philippines has been repealed by section 17 of Rule 109, but that
section 31 is still in force except the last sentence. And so, according to the resolution,
is section 2 of Act No. 194.
Without discussing the materiality of those laws, I disagree that they are still in
effect. Like article 30, article 31 of the Provisional Law and section 2 of Act No. 194
deal with procedure in justice of the peace courts in general covered by the new Rules
of Court. The Rules of Court, in the words of their introductory section, concern
"pleading, practice and procedure in all courts of the Philippines, and the admission to
practice law therein." These Rules are a complete revision and a complete re-enactment
of the entire eld of procedure, and there is every reason to believe that they were
intended to replace, with some exceptions, all previous laws on the subject, especially
Spanish laws which had long been out of harmony with the new mode of pleading and
practice. If the last sentence of article 31 is repealed, as the resolution says, I see no
valid ground for not holding the other parts of that article repealed also. "Where a later
act covers the whole subject of earlier acts, embraces new provisions, and plainly
shows that it was intended, not only a substitute for the earlier acts, but to cover the
whole subject then considered by the legislature, and to prescribe the only rules in
respect thereto, it operates as a repeal of all former statutes relating to such subject
matter. The rule applies not only where the former acts are inconsistent or in con ict
with the new act, but also even where the former acts are not necessarily repugnant in
express terms, or in all respects, to the new act." (59 C. J., 919-920.) "While, as a general
rule, implied repeal of a former statute by a later act is not favored, yet 'if the later act
covers the whole subject of the earlier act and is clearly intended as a substitute, it will
operate similarly as a repeal of the earlier'." Posadas vs. National City Bank of New
York, 296 U. S., 497; 80 Law ed., 351.)
As the Rules of Court took effect on July 1, 1940, the case of Marcos vs. Cruz,
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decided on May 30, 1939, and cited in the resolution, is no authority for the opinion that
no law has been enacted amending or repealing section 2 of Act No. 192.
But this rule of implied repeal holds good only as regards laws of general
application. Another well known rule of statutory construction tells us that preliminary
investigations in Manila and other chartered cities are to be excluded from the
operation of the Rules of Court. Such investigations are provided for by special
enactments which, because of their special nature and limited application, must be
excepted from and prevail over the general provisions. "When the provisions of a
general law, applicable to the entire state, are repugnant to the provisions of a
previously enacted special law, applicable in a particular locality only, the passage of
such general law does not operate to repeal the special law, either in whole or in part,
unless such repeal is provided for by express words, or arises by necessary implication.
An intention to repeal local acts generally is not inferable from the fact that the general
act speci cally excludes one locality from its operation." (59 C. J., 934.) There is no
apparent intention in the Rules of Court to repeal the laws under which preliminary
investigations in Manila have to be conducted by the city fiscal. The contrary intention is
evidenced by section 2 of Rule 108, which provides that "Every justice of the peace,
municipal judge or city scal shall have jurisdiction to conduct preliminary investigation
of all offenses alleged to have been committed within his municipality or city,
cognizable by the Court of First Instance," (Espiritu vs. De la Rosa [July 31, 1947], L-
1156, 45 Off. Gaz., 196; Hashim vs. Boncan [Nov. 22, 1941], 40 Off. Gaz., 13th Supp., p.
13.) In the rst of these cases, Mr. Justice Padilla, speaking for the Court, categorically
held that the "Rules of Court had not repealed and supplanted the provisions of the
Revised Administrative Code regarding the power and authority of the City Fiscal to
conduct preliminary investigation." And in Hashim vs. Boncan, the Court, through Mr.
Justice Laurel, said:
"The framers of the Rules could not have intended to brush aside these
lessons of experience and to tear down an institution recognized by law and
decision and sanctioned by years of settled practice. They could not have failed
to keep intact an effective machinery in the administration of criminal justice, as
expeditious and simple as any reform they have infused into the new Rules."
The term "proper court or judge" in section 17, Rule 109, of the Rules of Court 1
should be interpreted to mean, in the case of Manila, city scal, under the last
mentioned canon of interpretation. In Manila, the city scal performs the duties
devolving on justices of the peace in regular municipalities in the conduct of preliminary
investigations, and all criminal charges by the police and offended parties are led with
him. And it is admitted that prisoners arrested without warrant in Manila may be taken
only to the city scal by the arresting of cer. Let it be noted also in this connection that
section 17 of Rule 109 regulates the taking of persons arrested to the court or judge,
not the filing of complaint.
In view of these circumstances; in view of the fact that neither the judges of rst
instance nor the municipal judges of Manila are authorized to conduct preliminary
hearings other than for the purpose of determining the amount of bail (section 2474 of
the Revised Administrative Code), the result of applying section 17 of Rule 109 to
Manila would be virtually to eliminate preliminary investigation in this city of persons
arrested without a warrant. The decision creates a vacuum, a situation which this Court
on another occasion refused to countenance in the forceful language above quoted in
Hashim vs. Boncan et. al. There, the Court continued:
When the resolution concludes that if no bond is given by the person arrested,
"neither the chief of police, who is only authorized to release on bail, has power to
detain the person arrested for more than six hours; nor the city scal, who is
empowered to fix and recommend the bail to the chief of police has authority to release
person arrested in violation of penal law," I can not follow. In a nutshell, the majority's
reasoning, as I understand it, is that the law authorizes the city fiscal to recommend and
x the bail "in order that the chief of police may release the latter (prisoner) on bail," but
that if the prisoner does not put up a bond he has to be set at large just the same. The
ling of bail is not a meaningless gesture which may be taken advantage of by an
accused at pleasure with the same effect. The privilege to put up a bond extended to an
accused must be the price or condition of his temporary release. The law does not have
to say in so many words that if he does not put a bond he would be kept in con nement
in order that we may be warranted in reaching this result.
The resolution says that "the purpose of the law in empowering the chief of
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police of Manila to release the prisoner if he puts up a bail, is to relieve the of cer
making the arrest from the necessity of taking the prisoner to the city scal, and the
latter from ling an information with the proper courts within the period of time
prescribed by law."
I have re ected closely on the meaning of this statement to be sure that I did not
misunderstand it. Unless I still fail to grasp the idea, I think the statement is self-
annulling and self-contradictory. The ling of bail can not relieve the arresting of cer
from the necessity of taking the prisoner to the city scal for the simple reason that
such bail, in cases of violations of penal laws, can be led only on recommendation of,
and its amount can be xed by, the city scal. In other words, the prisoners necessarily
has to be taken to the city scal before any bond can be executed. And it would be
underestimating the intelligence of an accused to expect him to le a bond within six
hours from the time of his arrest if he is aware that, if at the end of those hours the city
scal had not preferred any charges against him and no order of commitment had been
issued by the proper judge, he (accused) had to be released. In the face of the latter
theory, no prisoner would, even if he could, perfect a bond within six hours knowing that
if he did not, he would be a free man, at least temporarily, within what remains of six
hours, while if he did, the bond would enable the city scal to take his time to le a case
against him in court.
The gravamen of the court's argument seems to be that a commitment by a
court or judge is essential to validate detention beyond the time speci ed in the
Revised Penal Code. I do not share this opinion. Neither such commitment by a judge
nor a formal complaint is required by the constitution in order that a person may
lawfully be kept in jail pending investigation of his case. An opportunity to le a bond in
a reasonable amount satis es the constitutional demands. Nor does the bail have to be
xed or granted by a court. Sheriffs and police of cers have been authorized by
statutory enactments in other jurisdictions to take bail. At least one court has gone so
far as to uphold, "independently of statute, a practice of long standing on the part of the
sheriff to take bail in criminal cases of prisoners committed for not ling bail, and
release them from con nement." (Dickinson vs. Kingsbury, 2 Day [Com., 1.] Now then,
under section 2460 of the Revised Administrative Code, the chief of police of Manila, as
already shown, is allowed to take bail by himself in cases of violations of a municipal
ordinance and with the intervention of the city scal in other cases. Under this provision
and this practice, a detention prisoner arrested without warrant is not deprived of any
privilege or bene t guaranteed by the constitution. The lack of a formal complaint does
not in the least prejudice him or deprive him of any bene t enjoyed by his counterparts
in the provinces. On its legal aspect, let it be observed that all the proceeding
conducted by the city scal is a preliminary and summary inquiry which is purely a
matter of statutory regulation. Preliminary investigation by the prosecuting attorney
when authorized by law is due process no less than one conducted by a judge. It may
be suppressed entirely, and if it may be suppressed, it may be entrusted to any of cer,
provided only the constitutional right to give bail is carefully safeguarded. As this Court
has said in Hashim vs. Boncan, supra, and U. S. vs. Ocampo, supra:
"The prosecuting attorney for the city of Manila is presumed to be as
competent to conduct a preliminary investigation as the average person
designated by law to conduct a 'preliminary examination' under the provisions of
General Orders No. 58. He is a sworn officer of the court, and the law imposes
upon him the duty of making such investigations. For such purpose the
legislature may designate whom it pleases within the judicial department."
The resolution has taken pain to cite and explain in detail what it says are the
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laws on arrests in the Philippines, and takes me to task for quoting from 6 Corpus Juris
Secundum, 599-600 and citing the decisions of this Court. We are told in effect that the
excerpts from my dissenting opinion, quoted on page 16 of the resolution, are without
any foundation because, it is said,
"they are premised on the wrong assumption that, under the laws in force in our
jurisdiction, a peace officer need not have personal knowledge but may arrest a
person without a warrant upon mere information from other person."
The resolution assumes that those excerpts are predicated on what I call the
common law rule, on Corpus Juris Secundum, and on decisions of the Supreme Court.
I commend a reading of my dissenting opinion. It will be seen that I did not base
on those laws, rules or decisions my statements, "The entire six hours might be
consumed by the police in their investigation alone;" "Even if the city scal be given the
chance to start his assigned task at the beginning of the six hour period, this time can
not insure proper and just investigation in complicated cases and in cases where the
persons arrested are numerous and witnesses are not on hand to testify," and "The
police is not authorized to round up witnesses and take them along with the prisoner to
the city scal." It will be seen that far from using as my premise those laws, rules and
decisions, which I said contain in brief outlines the powers of police of cers to make
arrests, I said clearly on page 12 of my dissenting opinion:
"I do not think the foregoing paragraph is relevant to the instant case. We
are not dealing with the authority of the police officer to make arrest without
warrant. There is no question raised against the legality of the prisoner's arrest.
Our problem concerns the time and period within which the city fiscal may make
his investigation, and the scope of his power."
It was the majority decision which brought the question of the authority of the
police to make arrests into the discussion. I only met the decision on its own territory
though I regarded that territory as outside the legitimate circle of the present dispute. I
cited Corpus Juris Secundum and decisions of this Court, which I said are derived from
common law, to refute the statement,
"a fortiori, a police officer has no authority to arrest and detain a person
charged with an offense upon complaint of the offended party or other persons
even though, after investigation, he becomes convinced that the accused is guilty
of the offense charged."
I especially wanted to express my disagreement with the thesis in the decision
that
"A peace officer has no power or authority to arrest a person without a
warrant upon complaint of the offended party or any other person, except in those
cases expressly authorized by law."
It was my humble opinion that the rules I cited and the rules on which the
decisions of this Court are predicated, were general provisions of law applicable to
varying and changed circumstances, and I wanted to deny the insinuation that there
were, or there might be, arrests without warrant "expressly authorized by law"; so I
countered that "I have not come across any law naming speci c offenses for
committing which the offenders shall be arrested without court orders." This is my
concept of express provisions authorizing arrests without a warrant.
Section 6 of Rule 109, section 2463 of the Revised Administrative Code, and the
Provisional Law on the subject of arrest, cited in the resolution in an attempt to show
the error of my citations, can not be a source of comfort to the majority. Rather, I
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should think, they reenforce my position, for I believe that the rules and decisions I cited
and the rules and laws called to our attention as the real thing, are in substantial
agreement. My mistake was in not citing, myself, Rule 109, section 6, of the Rules of
Court, section 2463 of the Revised Administrative Code, and the Provisional Law. I
might have found and cited them had I thought the matter worthy of more than a
passing notice.
Now that the resolution has gone into this subject at length, I shall devote a few
more lines to it at the peril of tiring the reader on what I believe an impertinent topic.
My citation from Corpus Juris and my comment that "this is a common law rule
implanted in the Philippines along with its present form of government, a rule which has
been cited and applied by this Court in a number of cases," has met with derision. I am
informed that my quotation is "not a general principle of law or common law rule
implanted in the Philippines"; that "it is a summary of the ruling of several states courts
based on statutory exceptions of the general rule."
I do not think I was wide off the mark when I said that the common law rule has
been transplanted to this country along with the present form of government and that
the rules and decisions I have quoted spring from the common law. And the majority
are not closer to the mark when they af rm that my quotation from Corpus Juris
Secundum, and section 2463 of the Revised Administrative Code are purely statutory
creation.
There was common law before there were statutes. Common law in England and
in the U. S. preceded statutes and constitutions. Statutes and constitutions in matters
of arrest came afterward, restating, af rming, clarifying, restricting or modifying the
common law.
"The English common law has been adopted as the basis of jurisprudence
in all the states of the Union with the exception of Louisiana 'where the civil law
prevails in civil matters.' (11 Am. Jur., 157.) And
"in England, under the common law, sheriffs, justices of the peace,
coroners, constables and watchmen were entrusted with special powers as
conservators of the peace, with authority to arrest felons and persons reasonably
suspected of being felons. Whenever a charge of felony was brought to their
notice, supported by reasonable grounds of suspicion, they were required to
apprehend the offenders, or at least to raise hue and cry, under penalty of being
indicted for neglect of duty."
See the footnote on pp. 2512-2513, Vol. 2, of Jones Blackstone and the
numerous cases therein cited. It is a footnote appended to the statement of a common
law principle which is of the same tenor as that just noted. Treatises on arrest not
infrequently start with a statement of the common law rule and speak of statutes and
constitutions in the sense I have mentioned. Moran's Commentaries on the Rules of
Court mention the common law (Vol. 2, p. 577) in connection with the power to make
arrest without a warrant.
The doctrine taken from 5 C. J., 395-396-that "the right to make arrest without a
warrant is usually regulated by express statute, and, except as authorized by such
statutes, an arrest without a warrant is illegal" is not at war with the proposition that
the authority of peace of cers to make arrest originated at common law and that
constitutions and statutes merely re-stated and de ned that authority with greater
precision, naming the of cers who may make arrest, the grades of offenses for, and the
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circumstances under, which arrest may be effected, etc. Arrests made by of cers not
designated or under circumstances not coming within the terms of the statute or
constitution are illegal.
Even then, broad constitutional or statutory inhibition against search and seizure
of property or persons without a warrant has exceptions, as can be inferred from the
two sentences preceding the above sentence quoted in the resolution. These
exceptions are cases where the public security has demanded the search and seizure.
"Well established exceptions to this rule have been long recognized in
cases of felony, and of breaches of the peace committed in the presence of the
party making the arrest." (5 C. J., 395.)
Arrests under such circumstances are authorized in spite of statutes and
constitutions. The power to make such arrest is deeply rooted in the unwritten or
common law, which "includes those principles, usages and rules of action applicable to
the government and security of person and property which do not rest for their
authority on any express or positive declaration of the will of the legislature." Although
acting at his peril, the powers to arrest on "probable cause of suspicion" even by a
private person are "principles of the common law, essential to the welfare of society,
and not intended to be altered or impaired by the Constitution." (Wakely vs. Hart, 6 Binn.
[Pa.,], 316,)
I have remarked that there is no fundamental difference between my citations, on
the one hand, and section 6 of Rule 109 and section 2463 of the Revised Administrative
Code, cited by the majority of the Court, on the other hand. There is only a difference in
phraseology. The very case of U. S. vs. Fortaleza relied upon in the resolution speaks of
barrio lieutenants' power to make arrest as not inferior to that usually conferred on
peace officers known to American and English law as constables.
The resolution quotes this from 5 C. J., 404:
"It is a general rule, although there are statutory exceptions and variations,
that a peace officer has no right to make an arrest without a warrant upon mere
information of a third person."
This is only a part of the sentence. The omitted portion is more important from
my point of view and contradicts the point stressed by the majority. The complete
sentence is
"It is a general rule, although there are exceptions and variations, that a
peace officer has no right to make an arrest without a warrant, upon mere
information of a third person or mere information of a third person or mere
suspicion that a misdemeanor has been committed, that right being limited to
arrests for offenses of the grade of felony, as elsewhere shown."
It will be noticed that the quoted portion relates to arrest for misdemeanor. For
further proof, I invite attention to the title of the Section on page 401, paragraph (a),
which reads: "For Misdeameanor aa. In General." Let it be noted that the power to
arrest for misdemeanor is different from, and more restricted than, the power to arrest
for felony, as is further demonstrated by the last clause of the full sentence above
quoted. This clause refers us back to section 30, p. 399, which says:
"At common law, (here again common law is mentioned), and subject to the
provisions of any applicatory statute, a peace of cer may arrest, without a warrant, one
whom he has reasonable or probable grounds to suspect of having committed a felony,
even though the person suspected is innocent, and, generally, although no felony has in
fact been committed by any one, although, under some statutes, a felony must have
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been actually committed, in which case an of cer may arrest, without a warrant, any
person he has reasonable cause for believing to be the person who committed it."
As is elsewhere stated, section 6 of Rule 109 and section 2463 of the Revised
Administrative Code, like the authorities I have cited, do not limit the power of a police
of cer to make arrest to those cases where he saw with his own eyes or heard with his
own ears the commission of an offense. Section 6 of Rule 109 and section 2463 of the
Revised Administrative Code are transcribed in full in the resolution, and I just suggest a
careful reading thereof. Section 2463 of the Revised Administrative Code empowers
police officers
"to pursue and arrest, without warrant, any person found in suspicious places or
under suspicious circumstances reasonably tending to show that such person
has committed, or is about to commit, any crime or breach of the peace,"
and section 6 of Rule 109 authorizes a peace of cer or a private person to make
arrest when
"an offense has in fact been committed, and he has reasonable ground to believe
that the person to be arrested has committed it"
Rule 28 of the Provisional Law itself empowers judicial and administrative
authorities "to detain, or cause to be detained person whom there is reasonable ground
to believe guilty of some offense" or "when the authority or agent has reason to believe
that unlawful act, amounting to a crime had been committed."
To make arrest on suspicion or on information is not new; it is an everyday
practice absolutely necessary in the interest of public security and rmly enshrined in
the jurisprudence of all civilized societies. The power to arrest on suspicion or on
reasonable ground to believe that a crime has been committed is authority to arrest on
information. Information coming from reliable sources may be, and it often is, the basis
of reasonable ground to believe that a crime has been committed or of reasonable
ground of suspicion that a person is guilty thereof. Suspicion, reasonable ground and
information are intertwined within the same concept.
"The necessary elements of the grounds of suspicion are that the officer
acts upon the belief of the person's guilt, based either upon facts or
circumstances within the officers own knowledge, or upon information imparted
by a reliable and credible third person provided there are no circumstances known
to the officer sufficient to materially impeach the information received. It is not
every idle and unreasonable charge which will justify an arrest. An arrest without
a warrant is illegal when it is made upon mere suspicion or belief, unsupported by
facts, circumstances, or credible information calculated to produce such
suspicion or belief."
Failure to take these principles into account has led to the belief that:
"The investigation which the city fiscal has to make before filing the
corresponding information in cases of persons arrested without a warrant, does
not require so much time as that made upon a complaint of the offended parties
for the purpose of securing a warrant of arrest of the accused. In all cases above
enumerated in which the law authorizes a peace officer to arrest without warrant,
the officer making the arrest must have personal knowledge that the person
arrested has committed, is actually committing, or is about to commit an offense
in his presence or within his view, or of the time, place or circumstances which
reasonably tend to show that such person has committed or is about to commit
any crime or breach of the peace. And the testimony of such officer on the
commission of the offense in his presence or within his view by the person
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arrested, or on the facts and circumstances that tend reasonably to show that
said person has committed or is about to commit an offense, would be sufficient
evidence or basis for the city fiscal to file an information without prejudice to his
presenting of other evidence or witnesses, if any, during the trial to insure the
conviction of the defendant." (Pp. 16-17 of the Resolution.)
Section 6 of Rule 109 of the Rules of Court and section 2463 of the Revised
Administrative Code, as well as the authorities I have quoted, show the fallacy of the
idea that the arresting of cer knows, or should know, all the facts about the offense for
the perpetration, or supposed perpetration, of which he has made the arrest. The
resolution fails to realize that in the great majority of cases an of cer makes arrest on
information or suspicion; that "suspicion implies a belief or opinion as to the guilt
based upon facts or circumstances which DO NOT AMOUNT TO PROOF;" and that
information and suspicion by their nature require veri cation and examination of the
informers and other persons and circumstances. While an of cer may not act on
unsubstantial appearances and unreasonable stories to justify an arrest without a
warrant, obviously in the interest of security, an of cer, who has to act on the spot and
cannot afford to lose time, has to make arrest without satisfying himself beyond
question that a crime has been committed or that the person suspected is guilty of
such crime. A police of cer can seldom make arrest with personal knowledge of the
offense and of the identity of the person arrested suf cient in itself to convict. To
require him to make an arrest only when the evidence he himself can furnish proves
beyond reasonable doubt the guilt of the accused, would "endanger the safety of
society." It would cripple the forces of the law to the point of enabling criminals, against
whom there is only moral conviction or prima facie proof of guilt, to escape. Yet
persons arrested on suspicion, on insuf cient evidence or information are not
necessarily innocent so that the prosecuting attorney should release them. Further and
closer investigation not infrequently confirm the suspicion or information.
The majority of arrests are not as simple as a police of cer catching a thief
slipping his hand into another's pocket or snatching someone else's bag, or surprising a
merchant selling above the ceiling price, or seizing a person carrying concealed
weapons. Cases of frequent occurrence which confront the police and the prosecution
in a populous and crime-ridden city are a great deal more complicated. They are cases
in which the needed evidence can only be supplied by witnesses, witnesses whom the
arresting of cer or private persons has not the authority or the time to round up and
take to the city fiscal for examination within what remains, if any, of six hours.
Let me give two examples.
1. A murder with robbery is reported to the police. An alarm is broadcasted
giving a description of the murderer. Later a police of cer is told that the wanted man
is in a store. He proceeds to the store and, besides believing in the good faith of his
informant, detects in the man's physical appearance some resemblance to the
description given in the alarm. All this occurs at the holy hours of night.
Should the of cer refrain from making an arrest because he is not certain beyond
reasonable doubt of the identity of the suspected murderer? Should the city fiscal order
the release of the prisoner because of insuf ciency of evidence and because the six
hours are expiring or should he prefer formal charges (if that can be done at midnight)
on the strength of evidence which, as likely as not, may be due to a mistaken identity?
Should not the prosecuting attorney be given, as the law clearly intends, adequate time
to summon those who witnessed the crime and who can tell whether the prisoner was
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the fugitive?, allowing the prisoner to give bail, if he can.
2. A police of cer is attracted by screams from a house where a robbery has
been committed. The of cer rushes to the place, nds a man slain, is told that the
murderers have ed. The of cer runs in the direction indicated and nds men with arms
who, from appearances, seem to be the perpetrators of the crime. The people who saw
the criminals run off are not sure those are the men they saw. The night was dark, for
criminals like to ply their trade under cover of darkness.
The of cer does not, under these circumstances, have to seek an arrest warrant
or wait for one before detaining the suspected persons. To prevent their escape he
brings them to the police station. On the other hand, would the fiscal be justified in filing
an information against such persons on the sole testimony of the police of cer? Is it
not his duty to wait for more proofs on their probable connection with the crime?
Should the city scal le an information on insuf cient evidence, or should he, as the
only alternative, order the release of the prisoners? Does either course subserve the
interest of justice and the interest of the public? If the arrested persons are innocent, as
they may be, is their interest best served by hasty ling of information against them, or
would they rather have a more thorough investigation of the case?
Cases like these with varying details can be multiplied ad infinitum. They form the
bulk of underworld activities with which the forces of law have to cope and with which
the general public is vitally concerned. The public would not be secure in their homes
and in the pursuit of their occupations if this Court, through unreasoning worship of
formalism, throws down a method, practice and procedure that have been used here
and elsewhere from time immemorial to the end of service and in the interest of public
security. The public is not much interested in such minor offenses as pick-pocketing,
st ghts and misdemeanors or violations of municipal ordinances for which arrests
can be made by police of cers only when committed in their presence or within their
hearing.
The decision of this Court leaves the city scal no alternative between releasing
prisoners for insuf ciency of evidence due to lack of time to secure more, and ling
information against persons who may be innocent of the crime charged. The latter
course, to which the city scal is driven to play safe, defeats directly the very aims of
preliminary investigation. The oft-repeated purpose of a preliminary investigation is to
secure the innocent against hasty, malicious and oppressive prosecution and to protect
him from open and public accusation of crime, and from the trouble, expense, anxiety of
a public trial, and also to protect the State from useless and expensive prosecutions.
(Hashim vs. Boncan, No. 47777, January 13, 1941; 40 Off. Gaz., 13th Supp. p. 13; U. S.
vs. Mendez, 4 Phil.; 124; U. S. vs. Grant and Kennedy, 11 Phil. 122; U. S. vs. Marfori, 35
Phil. 666; People vs. Colon, 47 Phil. 443.) Even more deplorable would be the acquittal
of guilty accused due to lack of proofs which the prosecution, if it had been afforded
sufficient time, could have gathered.
The foregoing goes, too, for the concurring opinion. There is only one more point
to which we wish to address ourselves brie y. The concurring opinion contains this
passage:
"Dentro de las 6 horas hay tiempo mas que suficiente para meter en
cuenta a toda canalla . . . Pero; por Dios que no se violen ni pisoteen las garantias
constitucionales por miedo a los gangsters!"
No one can disagree with this thought as an abstract proposition. The only
trouble is that the opinion does not cite any concrete constitutional provision or
guaranty that is infringed by our dissent. I take the suggestion in the resolution that
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"it would be proper for the interested parties to take the case to Congress, since it can
not be done by judicial legislation" to be a tacit recognition that the matter is purely
one of statute and that no constitutional impediment is in the way of changing the law
and enlarging the power of the city scal in the premises. And let it be said that the
objection in the concurring opinion to this suggestion is rested, not on constitutional
grounds but on the supposition that the law is good enough to be left alone. All of
which tempts us to paraphrase the famous apostrophe of that equally famous woman
in French history, and exclaim, "Oh Constitution! what grievous mistakes are committed
in thy name!"
The concurring opinion is in error when it sees shadows of fear of gangster in our
dissent. Society no less than a natural person has the right to protect itself, and the
arrest and punishment of transgressors of its laws is one of its legitimate means of
self- protection and self-preservation. As far as the insinuation of fear may re ect on
those who are duty bound to have a part in such arrest and punishment, the application
of criminal laws without quarters to the end which they are intended to serve, is not in
strict logic a sign of apprehension. Such course, rather than tolerance, leniency or
indifference towards crimes and appeasement of lawless and other elements and
groups who wield the power of physical and verbal retaliations, calls for exactly the
opposite quality of fright.
PADILLA , J : p
I concur
Footnotes
1. Any person making arrest for legal ground shall, without unnecessary delay and within
the time prescribed in the Revised Penal Code, take the person arrested to the proper
court or judge for such action as they may deem proper to take.
1. There shall be a chief of police who . . . may take good and suf cient bail for the
appearance before the city court of any person arrested for violation of any city
ordinance: Provided, however, That he shall not exercise this power in cases of
violations of any penal law, except when the scal of the city shall so recommend and
fix the bail to be required of the person arrested; . . .