People Vs Asis

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Topic: ARRESTS, SEARCHES AND SEIZURES (WARRANTLESS SEARCHES -

Valid Waiver)
Title: PEOPLE vs ASIS
Reference: GR No. 142531 October 15, 2002

FACTS
Danilo Asis y Fonperada and Gilbert Formento y Saricon were charged in an
Information; the information stating "That on or about February 10, 1998, in the
City of Manila, Philippines, the said accused, conspiring and confederating
together and mutually helping each other, did then and there wilfully, unlawfully
and feloniously, with intent to gain and by means of force and violence upon
person, to wit: by then and there stabbing one YU HING GUAN @ ROY CHING with
a bladed instrument on the different parts of the body thereafter take, rob and
carry away the following, to wit: Cash money in the amount of P20,000.00; 1
wristwatch' 1 gold necklace; and undetermined items; or all in the total amount of
P20,000.00 more or less, belonging to said YU HING GUAN @ ROY CHING against
his will, to the damage and prejudice of the said owner in the aforesaid amount
more or less of P20,000.00, Philippine Currency, and as a result thereof, he
sustained mortal stab wounds which were the direct and immediate cause of his
death." When arraigned, both accused pleaded not guilty. Found to be deaf-mutes,
they were assisted, not only by a counsel de oficio, but also by an interpreter from
the Calvary Baptist Church. The prosecution presented 9 witnesses. Although
none of them had actually seen the crime committed, strong and substantial
circumstantial evidence presented by them attempted to link both accused to the
crime.
After due trial, both accused were found guilty and sentenced to death. RTC of
Manila held that the "crime charged and proved is robbery with homicide under
Article 294, No. 1 of the RPC," ruled that "although no witnesses to the actual
killing and robbery were presented, the circumstantial evidence including the
recovery of bloodstained clothing from both accused definitely proved that the
two (2) committed the crime," and appreciated the aggravating circumstances of
abuse of confidence, superior strength and treachery and thus sentenced both
accused to the supreme penalty of death.
Hence, the automatic review before the Supreme Court. Both the accused do
not question the legality of their arrest, as they made no objection thereto before
the arraignment, but object to the introduction of the bloodstained pair of shorts
allegedly recovered from the bag of Formento; arguing that the search was
illegally done, making the obtainment of the pair of shorts illegal and taints them
as inadmissible. The prosecution, on the other hand, contends that it was
Formento's wife who voluntarily surrendered the bag that contained the
bloodstained trousers of the victim, and thus claims that her act constituted a
valid consent to the search without a warrant.

ISSUES
Whether or not Formento, a deaf-mute, has given consent to the recovery of
the bloodstained pair of short, in his possession during the warrantless search?

RULINGS
NO. Primarily, the constitutional right against unreasonable searches and
seizures, being a personal one, cannot be waived by anyone except the person
whose rights are invaded or who is expressly authorized to do so on his or her
behalf. In the present case, the testimonies of the prosecution witnesses show
that at the time the bloodstained pair of shorts was recovered, Formento, together
with his wife and mother, was present.
Being the very subject of the search, necessarily, he himself should have
given consent. Since he was physically present, the waiver could not have come
from any other person. Lopez vs. Commissioner of Customs does not apply as the
accused therein was not present when the search was made.
Further, to constitute a valid waiver, it must be shown that first, the right
exists; second, the person involved had knowledge, actual or constructive, of the
existence of such a right; and third, the person had an actual intention to
relinquish the right. Herein, Formento could not have consented to a warrantless
search when, in the first place, he did not understand what was happening at that
moment. There was no interpreter to assist him -- a deaf-mute -- during the arrest,
search and seizure. The point in the case Pasion vda. de Garcia v. Locsin, i.e. "as
the constitutional guaranty is not dependent upon any affirmative act of the
citizen, the courts do not place the citizen in the position of either contesting an
officers authority by force, or waiving his constitutional rights; but instead they
hold that a peaceful submission to a search or seizure is not a consent or an
invitation thereto, but is merely a demonstration of regard for the supremacy of
the law," becomes even more pronounced in the present case, in which Formento
is a deaf-mute, and there was no interpreter to explain to him what was
happening. His seeming acquiescence to the search without a warrant may be
attributed to plain and simple confusion and ignorance. The bloodstained pair of
shorts was a piece of evidence seized on the occasion of an unlawful search and
seizure. Thus, it is tainted and should thus be excluded for being the proverbial
fruit of the poisonous tree. In the language of the fundamental law, it shall be
inadmissible in evidence for any purpose in any proceeding. Lastly, as to evidence
vis-a-is the case in its totality, circumstantial evidence that merely arouses
suspicions or gives room for conjecture is not sufficient to convict. It must do more
than just raise the possibility, or even the probability, of guilt. It must engender
moral certainty. Otherwise, the constitutional presumption of innocence prevails,
and the accused deserves acquittal.

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