G.R. No. 9601 September 29, 1914

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Republic of the PhilippinesSUPREME COURTManila

EN BANC
G.R. No. 9601

September 29, 1914

THE UNITED STATES, plaintiff-appellee, vs.EUGNIO GACUTAN,


defendant-appellant.
F. Sanchez and B. Pobre for appellant.Office of the Solicitor-General
Corpuz for appellee.
MORELAND, J.:
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Court of First Instance of
Cagayan convicting the accused of the crime of bribery, as defined in
articles 385 and 389 of the Penal Code, and sentencing him to one
year and one day of imprisonment, to pay a fine of P160, together
with the costs of the proceeding to suffer subsidiary imprisonment as
prescribed by law, and to suffer temporary special disqualification for
a period of six years and one day, and declaring the carabao forfeited
to the Government of the Philippines Islands.
From the evidence in the case as introduced by the prosecution it
appears that Domingo Pascua, about July 20, 1912, filed in
appellant's court, he being the justice of the peace in and for the
municipality of Solana in the Province of Cagayan, a complaint
against one Elias Pagulayan for the said case was decided, Pascua,
at the request of appellant made several weeks before the trial o said
case, gave to appellant a female carabao worth about P80, in
consideration of which appellant agreed to decide said action
adversely to Pagulayan; that the carabao was delivered to appellant;
and that thereafter, August 12, 1912, the accused decided the case
against Pagulayan, convicting him of larceny and sentencing him to
six months' imprisonment, to pay the costs of the trial, and to
indemnify Pascua in the sum of P50.
On the other hand, the appellant claims to have proved by his
witnesses and by Pascua's declarations that Pascua borrowed P20
from the appellant and promised, in case of his failure to repay the
sum loaned, that he would give the appellant a carabao in settlement

thereof, and that said carabao in question was delivered to appellant


in pursuance of said agreement.
Having examined the record with care, we do not hesitate in
concluding that from the evidence remains no doubt of the guilt of the
accused of the crime of bribery.
From the judgment of conviction and sentence this court is unable to
say under what section of the Penal Code the accused was tried or
convicted or what was the character of punishment imposed. We
have held in the case of United States vs. Mariano (27 Phil. Rep., 132
) that in every criminal case the court should not only make a
statement of the facts upon which the judgment of conviction was
founded, but should also refer to the section of the Penal Code or of
the statute under which the accused was convicted and sentenced
and the kind of punishment imposed. In other words, the sentence
should specifically show whether the defendant was sentenced to
presidio correccional or presidio mayor or arresto mayor and in what
degree. A sentence for one year and one day is not complete
sentence according to the practice of the courts. It should be one
year and one day of presidio correccional and should state whether it
is the minimum, medium, or maximum degree thereof.
The Solicitor-General found himself in the difficulty to which we have
just referred when he attempted to sustain the judgment and
sentence of the trial court. He says:
Having in mind the penalty imposed by the lower court upon the
defendant and appellant, "one year and one day of imprisonment, a
fine of P160 or subsidiary imprisonment in case of insolvency,
payment of the costs, and disqualification for a period of six years
and one day under article 385 of the Penal Code, and confiscation of
the carabao in accordance with article 389 of the same code," it
seems that the court convicted the accused under article 382 of the
Penal Code.
This discloses the manner in which the Solicitor-General, as well as
this court, has arrived at the article of the Penal Code on which the
conviction is founded.
Counsel for the accused was also uncertain as to the article under

which the accused was convicted. He says:


The judgment appears to be based on articles 381 or 382 of the
Penal Code.
We are of the opinion that the accused should have been convicted
under article 382 of the Penal Code, which provides that:
Any public officer who shall agree to commit any act of injustice not
constituting a crime in connection with the exercise of the powers of
his office, in consideration of any offer or promise or of any gift or
present received by such officer, personally or through the mediation
of another, shall, if the act of injustice be committed, suffer the
penalty of presidio correccional in its medium and minimum degrees
and pay a fine of not less than the value of the gift and not more than
three times such value; if the act of injustice shall not have been
committed, a penalty ranging from arresto mayor in its maximum
degree to presidio correccional in its maximum degree and a fine of
not less than the value of the gift and not more than double such
value shall be imposed.
It certainly is an act injustice to convict a person charged with a crime
without regard to what the evidence in the case may be. The accused
promised Pascua to convict Pagulayan regardless of the evidence in
the case and apparently carried out his promise. In consideration
thereof he was to receive and did receive a carabao worth P80. It is
an act of injustice for a judicial officer to decide a case pending before
him regardless of what the evidence may show. ( U. S. vs. Alban, 4
Phil. Rep., 363.)
The act of injustice having been committed, the defendant should
have been punished with presidio correccional in its medium and
minimum degrees and sentenced to pay a fine of not less than the
value of the gift and not more than three times its value. The gift itself
should also have been confiscated, under article 389 of the Penal
Code.
The case does not fall within article 381 of the Penal Code for the
reason that, in order to be within that article, the act which the
accused agrees to commit must be criminal. The act with he agreed
to perform inn the case before us was to convict the accused. This

was not a criminal act. Nor does the act fall within the provisions of
article 347 of the Penal Code, which provides that "any judge who
shall knowingly render an unjust decision against the defendant,
etc.," shall be punished as therein provided. We do not know whether
the decision was a just one or an unjust one. There is nothing in the
record to determine that fact. We may say, therefore, without
determining what effect, if any, the decision of the Supreme Court of
the United States in the case of Alzua vs. Johnson (231 U. S., 106)
has upon the provisions of Chapter I of Title VII of the Penal Code,
that there is no evidence upon which we may determine that the
judgment to be rendered was an unjust judgment.
There appearing in the case neither aggravating nor extenuating
circumstances, the penalty should be imposed in the medium degree.
The court should have imposed a penalty of one year eight months
and twenty-one days of prision correccional, a fine of P160,
confiscation of the carabao, the costs of the trial, and eight years and
one day of temporary special disqualification.
As so amended, the judgment is affirmed, with costs against the
appellant.
Arellano, C.J., Torres, Johnson, Carson and Araullo, JJ., concur.

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