Supreme Court: People v. Cuizon G.R. No. 109287
Supreme Court: People v. Cuizon G.R. No. 109287
Supreme Court: People v. Cuizon G.R. No. 109287
109287 1 of 13
showed that accused Pua and Lee occupied Room 340 of the hotel. The two accused allowed Dio
and Yap, together with Col. Arellano, to enter their room. Found inside Room 340 were four (4)
traveling bags, which were similar to the ones handed by accused Cuizon to accused Pua and Lee at
the Arrival Area of the NAIA. After having introduced themselves as NBI agents, Dio and Yap
were permitted by accused Pua and Lee to search their bags in the presence of Col. Arellano. The
permission was made in writing. (Exh. I). Three (3) of the four (4) bags each yielded a plastic
package containing a considerable quantity of white crystalline substance suspected to be
methamphethamine hydrochloride or "shabu". Each package was sandwiched between two (2)
pieces of board which appear to be "lawanit" placed at the bottom of each of the three (3) bags. The
suspected "shabu" contained in one bag weighed 2.571 kilos, that found in the other had a weight of
2.768 kilos, and the suspected "shabu" retrieved from the third bag weighed 2.970 kilos. Pua and
Lee were then apprehended by Dio and his companions (tsn, May 20, 1992, pp. 9-13; tsn, May 7,
1992, p. 9, Exh. "F-2", p. 75, Records).
Immediately thereafter, Dio and the other members of the team proceeded to the house of accused
Cuizon in Caloocan City, taking with them accused Pua and Lee and the bags with their contents of
suspected dangerous drugs. They reached the place at about 5:50 in the afternoon of the same date of
February 21, 1992. Retrieved from accused Cuizon in his residence was another bag also containing
a white crystalline substance weighing 2.695 kilos, likewise believed to be methamphetamine
hydrochloride or "shabu". In addition, a .38 Cal. firearm was taken from accused Cuizon (tsn, May
19, 1992, pp. 10-11).
Pua, Lee, Cuizon and his wife were then brought by the arresting officers to the NBI headquarters at
Taft Avenue, Manila, for further investigation. They were subsequently referred to the Prosecution
Division of the Department of Justice for inquest. However, only the present three accused were
charged in court (tsn, May 19, 1992, pp. 12-13, 16-17).
In the meantime, at about 5:30 p.m. of the same date of February 21, 1992, Joselito Soriano,
roomboy of the Manila Peninsula Hotel, while cleaning Room 340, observed that a portion of the
ceiling was misaligned. While fixing it, he discovered in the ceiling a laundry bag containing
suspected "shabu" of more than five (5) kilos (Exh. "X," p. 110). Informed of the discovery while
they were already in their office in the NBI, Yap and some companions returned to the hotel. The
suspected "shabu" was turned over to them (tsn, May 20, 1992, pp. 19-22).
When examined in the Forensic Chemistry Section of the NBI, the white crystalline substance taken
from the three (3) travelling bags found in the room of accused Pua and Lee in the Manila Peninsula
hotel, the white crystalline substance retrieved from the bag confiscated from accused Cuizon in his
house in Caloocan City, and the white crystalline substance hidden in the ceiling of Room 340 of the
hotel were confirmed to be methamphetamine hydrochloride or "shabu", a regulated drug. (Board
Regulation No. 6, dated December 11, 1972, of the Dangerous Drugs Board) (tsn, May 7, 1992, p.
12).
The Defense's Version(s)
Appellant Pua, on his part, interposed the defense of alibi. On direct examination, he testified that at the time of the
alleged commission of the offense, he and his co-appellant Lee were in their room at the Manila Peninsula Hotel.
People v. Cuizon G.R. No. 109287 4 of 13
His version of what happened on February 21, 1992 can be summarized as follows:
At around 9:30 in the morning, he accompanied appellant Paul Lee to check-in at the Manila Peninsula Hotel for
and in behalf of the latter's personal friend named Leong Chong Chong or Paul Leung, who was expected to arrive
that evening because of a delayed flight. Appellant Pua was engaged by appellant Lee to act as interpreter as Lee
does not know how to speak English and the local language.
While in Room 340, past 1:00 in the afternoon, they received a call from the lobby informing them of the arrival of
Paul Leung's luggage. At Pua's instructions, the said luggage were brought to the room by a bellboy. Thereafter,
two persons knocked on their door, accompanied by a "tomboy" and a thin man with curly hair. The two men
identified themselves as NBI agents and asked appellant Pua to let them in. He declined since he did not know who
they were. However, when Col. Arellano, the Chief Security Officer of the hotel, arrived and identified the two
NBI agents, he and Lee relented and permitted them to enter. Thereafter, he and Lee were told by the agents to sign
a piece of paper. Made to understand that they were merely giving their consent for the agents to enter their room,
Pua and Lee signed the same. Whereupon, the agents told them that they will open Paul Leung's bags. Again
appellant Pua refused, saying that the bags did not belong to them. Just the same, the agents, without appellants
Pua and Lee's consent, opened the bags and found the shabu. Pua and Lee were then apprehended and brought to
the NBI headquarters.
Appellant Cuizon, on the other hand, flatly rejected the prosecution's version of the incident. While admitting that
on February 21, 1992, he and his wife Susan did arrive from Hong Kong with several pieces of luggage, he denied
that he met Pua and Lee at the arrival area of the airport, much less passed to them the four pieces of luggage.
According to him, only his two-year old son, accompanied by his cousin, Ronald Allan Ong, met them outside the
airport. Ong fetched them from the airport and brought them to their home in Caloocan city. They arrived at their
house around 3:00 in the afternoon.
About two hours later, while he was resting together with his wife and son on his bed, two NBI agents suddenly
barged in and poked a gun at him. They manhandled him in front of his wife and son. His hands were tied with a
necktie and he was forcibly brought out of their house while the NBI agents ransacked the place without any
warrant. He, his wife Susan, and his cousin Ronald Allan Ong, were afterwards brought to the NBI Headquarters in
Manila and there the NBI agents continued mauling him.
Appellant Cuizon's wife Susan, his cousin Ronald Allan Ong, and his nephew Nestor Dalde, testified in his favor
basically reiterating or confirming his testimony.
Unfortunately, appellant Paul Lee, who does not speak or understand a word of English or Pilipino and only knows
Chinese-Cantonese, was not able to take the witness stand for lack of an interpreter who would translate his
testimony to English. In the hearing set on October 28, 1992, the last trial date allotted to the defense for the
reception of Lee's testimony, his counsel, although notified of the proceedings, did not appear. Thus, the trial court
deemed him and Pua to have waived their right to present additional evidence, and the case was considered
submitted for decision after the filing of memoranda. The counsel for Pua and Lee did not ask for the
reconsideration of such ruling; neither did he submit any memorandum. Only accused Cuizon, who was assisted by
another counsel, was able to submit his memorandum.
The Issues
In their brief, appellants Pua and Lee made the following assignments of errors:
People v. Cuizon G.R. No. 109287 5 of 13
met. The prosecution failed to establish that at the time of the arrest, an offense had in fact just been committed and
the arresting officers had personal knowledge of facts indicating that the accused-appellants had committed it.
Appellant Cuizon could not, by the mere act of handing over four pieces of luggage to the other two appellants, be
considered to have committed the offense of "carrying and transporting" prohibited drugs. Under the circumstances
of the case, there was no sufficient probable cause for the arresting officers to believe that the accused were then
and there committing a crime. The act per se of handing over the baggage, assuming the prosecution's version to be
true; cannot in any way be considered a criminal act. It was not even an act performed under suspicious
circumstances as indeed, it took place in broad daylight, practically at high noon, and out in the open, in full view
of the public. Furthermore, it can hardly be considered unusual, in an airport setting, for travellers and/or their
welcomers to be passing, handing over and delivering pieces of baggage, especially considering the somewhat
obsessive penchant of our fellow countrymen for sending along ("pakikipadala") things and gifts through friends
and relatives. Moreover, one cannot determine from the external appearance of the luggage that they contained
"shabu" hidden beneath some secret panel or false bottom. The only reason why such act of parting with luggage
took on the color and dimensions of a felonious deed, at least as far as the lawmen were concerned, was the alleged
tip that the NBI agents purportedly received that morning, to the effect that appellant Cuizon would be arriving that
same day with a shipment of shabu. To quote from another decision of like import, "(A)11 they had was hearsay
information (from the telephone caller), and about a crime that had yet to be committed."
In the leading case of People vs. Burgos, this Court laid down clear guidelines, as follows:
Under Section 6(a) of Rule 113, the officer arresting a person who has just committed, is
committing, or is about to commit an offense must have personal knowledge of that fact. The
offense must also be committed in his presence or within his view. (Sayo v. Chief of Police, 80 Phil.
859).
The same decision is highly instructive as it goes on to state:
The Solicitor General is of the persuasion that the arrest may still be considered lawful under
Section 6 (b) using the test of reasonableness. He submits that the information given by Cesar
Masamlok was sufficient to induce a reasonable ground (for belief) that a crime has been committed
and that the accused is probably guilty thereof.
In arrests without a warrant under Section 6(b), however, it is not enough that there is reasonable
ground to believe that the person to be arrested has committed a crime. A crime must in fact or
actually have been committed first. That a crime has actually been committed is an essential
precondition. It is not enough to suspect that a crime may have been committed. The fact of the
commission of the offense must be undisputed. The test of reasonable ground applies only to the
identity of the perpetrator.
In this case, the accused was arrested on the sole basis of Masamlok's verbal report. Masamlok led
the authorities to suspect that the accused had committed a crime. They were still fishing for
evidence of a crime not yet ascertained. The subsequent recovery of the subject firearm on the basis
of information from the lips of a frightened wife cannot make the arrest lawful. . . .
The foregoing doctrine was affirmed in the case of Alih vs. Castro, where this Court ruled that ". . . under the
Revised Rule 113, Section 5(b), the officer making the arrest must have personal knowledge of the ground therefor
People v. Cuizon G.R. No. 109287 8 of 13
2. In People vs. Tangliben, the accused, carrying a travelling bag at a bus terminal, was noticed by lawmen to be
acting suspiciously, and was also positively fingered by an informer as carrying marijuana, and so he was accosted
by policemen who happened to be on a surveillance mission; the lawmen asked him to open the bag, in which was
found a package of marijuana leaves. It was held that there was a valid warrantless arrest and search incident
thereto. The Court in effect considered the evidence on hand sufficient to have enabled the law enforcers to secure
a search warrant had there been time, but as the case "presented urgency," and there was actually no time to obtain
a warrant since the accused was about to board a bus, and inasmuch as an informer had given information "on the
spot" that the accused was carrying marijuana, the search of his person and effects was thus considered valid.
3. In Posadas vs. Court of Appeals, the accused was seen acting suspiciously, and when accosted by two members
of the Davao INP who identified themselves as lawmen, he suddenly fled, but was pursued, subdued and placed in
custody. The buri bag he was carrying yielded an unlicensed revolver, live ammunition and a tear gas grenade. This
Court upheld his conviction for illegal possession of firearms, holding that there was under the circumstances
sufficient probable cause for a warrantless search.
4. In People vs. Moises Maspil, Jr., et al., agents of the Narcotics Command set up a checkpoint on a highway in
Atok, Benguet, to screen vehicular traffic on the way to Baguio City due to confidential reports from informers that
Maspil and a certain Bagking would be transporting a large quantity of marijuana. At about 2 a.m. of November 1,
1986, the two suspects, riding a jeepney, pulled up to the checkpoint and were made to stop. The officers noticed
that the vehicle was loaded with some sacks and tin cans, which, when opened, were seen to contain marijuana
leaves. The Court upheld the search thus conducted as being incidental to a valid warrantless arrest.
5. In People vs. Lo Ho Wing, et al., the Court ruled that the search of the appellants' moving vehicles and the
seizure of "shabu" therefrom was legal, in view of the intelligence information, including notably, clandestine
reports by a planted deep penetration agent or spy who was even participating in the drug smuggling activities of
the syndicate, to the effect that appellants were bringing in prohibited drugs into the country. The Court also held
that it is not practicable to secure a search warrant in cases of smuggling with the use of a moving vehicle to
transport contraband, because the vehicle can be quickly moved out of the locality or jurisdiction in which the
warrant must be sought.
6. In People vs. Malmstedt, NARCOM agents stationed at Camp Dangwa, Mountain Province, set up a temporary
checkpoint to check vehicles coming from the Cordillera Region, due to persistent reports that vehicles from
Sagada were transporting marijuana and other drugs, and because of particular information to the effect that a
Caucasian would be travelling from Sagada that day with prohibited drugs. The bus in which accused was riding
was stopped at the checkpoint. While conducting an inspection, one of the NARCOM men noticed that accused,
the only foreigner on board, had a bulge at the waist area. Thinking it might be a gun, the officer sought accused's
passport or other identification papers. When the latter failed to comply, the lawman directed him to bring out
whatever it was that was bulging at his waist. It was a pouch bag which, when opened by the accused, was found to
contain packages of hashish, a derivative of marijuana. Invited for questioning, the accused disembarked from the
bus and brought along with him two pieces of luggage; found inside were two teddy bears stuffed with more
hashish. The Court held that there was sufficient probable cause in the premises for the lawmen to believe that the
accused was then and there committing a crime and/or trying to hide something illegal from the authorities. Said
probable cause arose not only from the persistent reports of the transport of prohibited drugs from Sagada, and the
"tip" received by the NARCOM that same day that a Caucasian coming from Sagada would be bringing prohibited
drugs, but also from the failure of the accused to present his passport or other identification papers when
People v. Cuizon G.R. No. 109287 10 of 13
confronted by the lawmen, which only triggered suspicion on the part of the law enforcers that accused was trying
to hide his identity, it being the normal thing expected of an innocent man with nothing to hide, that he readily
present identification papers when asked to do so. The warrantless arrest and search were thus justified.
In all the cases discussed hereinabove, there were facts which were found by the Court to provide probable cause
justifying warrantless arrests and searches, i.e., distinct odor of marijuana, reports about drug transporting or
positive identification by informers, suspicious behaviour, attempt to flee, failure to produce identification papers,
and so on. Too, urgency attended the arrests and searches because each of the above-mentioned cases involved the
use of motor vehicles and the great likelihood that the accused would get away long before a warrant can be
procured. And, lest it be overlooked, unlike in the case before us now, the law enforcers in the aforementioned
cases acted immediately on the information received, suspicions raised, and probable causes established, and
effected the arrests and searches without any delay.
Unexplained Matters in the Instant Case
In the case before us, the NBI agents testified that they purportedly decided against arresting the accused-
appellants inside the airport as they allegedly wanted to discover the identities of the airport immigration, security
or customs personnel who might be protecting the accused or otherwise involved in the drug smuggling activities,
and also in order to avoid the possibility of an armed encounter with such protectors, which might result in injuries
to innocent bystanders. These excuses are simply unacceptable. They are obviously after-thoughts concocted to
justify their rank failure to effect the arrest within constitutional limits. Indeed, the NBI men failed to explain how
come they did not apprehend the appellants at the moment Cuizon handed over the baggage to Pua and Lee, or
even afterwards, in relative safety. Such arrest would have been consistent with the settled constitutional, legal and
jurisprudential precedents earlier cited.
The spouses Cuizon had already passed through the airport security checks allegedly with their contraband cargo
undetected in their luggage. Apparently, the NBI agents did not see (as indeed they did not testify that they saw)
anyone from the airport immigration, security or customs who could have escorted the spouses Cuizon, and
therefore, there was no danger of any "live ammo encounter" with such group(s). The alleged drug couriers had
already made their way outside the NAIA, had allegedly made contact with the accused Pua and Lee, and were in
the very act of handing over the luggage to the latter. Why the NBI men did not move in and pounce on them at
that very instant has not been satisfactorily explained. Instead, one of the agents, Dio, merely watched as Pua and
Lee loaded the luggage into a cab and took off for Makati. Furthermore, it taxes the imagination too much to think
that at the most critical and climactic moment, when agent Dio radioed his companions for help to close in on the
suspects, the most amazing and stupendous thing actually happened: Murphy's Law kicked in whatever could
go wrong, did, and at the worst possible time the batteries in Agent Dio's hand-held radio supposedly went
dead and his message was not transmitted. Thus the departing Pua and Lee proceeded merrily and unimpeded to
the Peninsula Hotel, while the spouses Cuizon simultaneously sped off to their residence in Caloocan City, leaving
the lawmen empty-handed and scampering madly to catch up. Such absolutely astounding and incredible
happenstance might find a place in a fourth-rate movie script, but expecting the courts to swallow it hook, line
and sinker is infinite naivete, if not downright malevolence.
Even granting arguendo that the radio really went dead, nevertheless, the agents were not thereby rendered helpless
or without recourse. The NBI agents, numbering five in all, not counting their so-called informant, claimed to have
piled into three cars (TSN, May 19, 1992) and tailed the suspects Pua and Lee into Makati, keeping a safe two-car
People v. Cuizon G.R. No. 109287 11 of 13
distance behind (TSN, May 20, 1992). The lawmen and the prosecutors failed to explain why the agents did not
intercept the vehicle in which Pua and Lee were riding, along the way, pull them over, arrest them and search the
luggage. And since the agents were in three (3) cars, they also could have easily arranged to have agents in one
vehicle follow, intercept and apprehend the Cuizons while the others went after Pua and Lee. All or any of these
possible moves are mere ordinary, common-sense steps, not requiring a great deal of intelligence. The NBI men
who testified claimed to have conducted or participated in previous drug busts or similar operations and therefore
must have been familiar with contingency planning, or at least should have known what to do in this situation
where their alleged original plan fell through. At any rate, what the lawmen opted to do, i.e., allow Pua and Lee to
freely leave the airport, allegedly bringing the drug cache to the hotel, and Cuizon to leave unimpededly the airport
and reach his residence with one of the luggage, increased significantly the risk of the suspects (and/or the drugs)
slipping through the lawmen's fingers, and puts into question the regularity of performance of their official
functions. The agents' alleged actions in this case compare poorly with the forthright and decisive steps taken by
lawmen in the cases earlier cited where this Court held the arrests and seizures to be valid.
Had the arrests and searches been made in transitu, i.e., had the agents intercepted and collared the suspects on the
way to Makati and Caloocan, or better yet, at the very moment of the hand-over, then there would not have been
any question at all as to the legality of their arrest and search, as they would presumably have been caught red-
handed with the evidence, and consequently for that reason and by the very nature and manner of commission of
the offense charged, there would have been no doubt also as to the existence of conspiracy among the appellants to
transport the drugs. However, because of the way the operation actually turned out, there is no sufficient proof of
conspiracy between Pua and Lee on the one hand, and Cuizon on the other, inasmuch as there is no clear and
convincing evidence that the four (4) bags handed by Cuizon to Pua and Lee at the airport were the very same ones
found in the possession of the latter in Room 340 of the Peninsula Hotel. Not one of the NBI agents when
testifying could definitely and positively state that the bags seized from Room 340 were the very same ones passed
by Cuizon at the airport; at best, they could only say that they "looked like" the ones they saw at the airport. And
even assuming them to be the same bags, there remains doubt and uncertainty as to the actual ownership of the said
bags as at the alleged turnover vis-a-vis the time they were seized by the agents. For these reasons, we cannot
sustain the finding of conspiracy as between Cuizon on the one hand and Pua and Lee on the other. Well-settled is
the rule that conspiracy must be proved independently and beyond reasonable doubt.
Additionally, in light of the foregoing discussion, we find it extremely difficult to subscribe to the trial court's
finding as to the existence and sufficiency of probable cause in this case, one major component of which would
have been the alleged information or "tip" purportedly received by the agents as to the expected arrival of the
spouses Cuizon that fateful day with a large cache of "shabu". The question that defies resolution in our minds is
why, if indeed the information or "tip" was genuine and from a highly reliable source as claimed by the
government agents, did they not act on it? Throw in the alleged month-long surveillance supposedly conducted by
some of the NBI people on the Cuizon couple, and the mystery only deepens. Even with the so-called tip and the
results of surveillance, the government officers were still seemingly hesitant, reluctant, uncertain, or perhaps afraid,
to arrest and search the accused appellants, so much so that the NBI agents who went after Pua and Lee at the
Peninsula Hotel, instead of outrightly cuffing and searching them, as they were supposed to, opted instead to play it
safe and meekly beseeched the two to sign a written consent for the agents to search their personal effects! Indeed,
this is one for the books. If this is how confident the agents were about their "hot tips", reliable informers and
undercover surveillance, then we cannot be blamed for failing to appreciate the existence/sufficiency of probable
cause to justify a warrantless arrest and search in this case. There is a whole lot more that can be said on this score,
People v. Cuizon G.R. No. 109287 12 of 13
but we shall leave it at that for now. We shall now dispose of the appeals of the accused-appellants individually.
Re: Appellant Antolin Cuizon
The search of the house of appellant Cuizon, having been conducted without any warrant, and not on the occasion
or as an incident of a valid warrantless arrest, was indubitably illegal, and the shabu seized thereat could not be
admissible in evidence. That is why even the trial judge did not make an effort to hold him liable under such
seizure. He lamely argued: "(A)t any rate, accused Cuizon is not held criminally liable in this case in connection
with the bag containing "shabu" confiscated from his residence. His responsibility is based on the bags containing
"shabu" which he handed to Pua and Lee at the NAIA. Consequently, even if the bag and its contents of "shabu"
taken from his house were not admitted in evidence, the remaining proofs of the prosecution would still be
sufficient to establish the charge against him." However, contrary to the trial judge's conclusion, we hold that
insofar as Cuizon is concerned, all the evidence seized are considered fruit of the poisonous tree and are
inadmissible as against him, and thus, he should be acquitted, since, as shown hereinabove, (i) the warrantless
search conducted on Pua and Lee was clearly illegal per se, not being incident to a valid warrantless arrest either;
(ii) and even if the search on Pua and Lee were not illegal, conspiracy as between Cuizon on the one hand and
appellants Pua and Lee on the other had not been established by sufficient proof beyond reasonable doubt; and (iii)
appellant Cuizon had timely raised before this Court the issue of the illegality of his own arrest and the search and
seizure conducted at his residence, and questioned the admission of the seized shabu in evidence.
Re: Appellant Steve Pua @ "Tommy Sy"
What has been said for Cuizon cannot, alas, be said for appellant Pua. While the search and arrest carried out on
him and Lee may have been illegal for not being incident to a lawful warrantless arrest, the unfortunate fact is that
appellant Pua failed to challenge the validity of his arrest and search, as well as the admission of the evidence
obtained thereby; he did not raise the issue or assign the same as an error before this Court. Accordingly, any
possible challenge thereto based on constitutional grounds is deemed waived. This Court has upheld and
recognized waivers of constitutional rights, including, particularly, the right against unreasonable searches and
seizures, in cases such as People vs. Malasugui and De Garcia vs. Locsin.
Additionally, the prosecution had argued and the trial court agreed that by virtue of the handwritten consent
(Exhibit "I") secured by the arresting officers from appellants Pua and Lee, the latter freely gave their consent to
the search of their baggage, and thus, the drugs discovered as a result of the consented search is admissible in
evidence. The said written permission is in English, and states plainly that they (Pua and Lee) freely consent to the
search of their luggage to be conducted by NBI agents to determine if Pua and Lee are carrying shabu. It appears
that appellant Pua understands both English and Tagalog; he is born of a Filipino mother, had resided in Vito Cruz,
Manila, and gave his occupation as that of salesman. He admitted that he was asked to sign the written consent, and
that he did in fact sign it (TSN, May 28, 1992, pp. 33-34). His barefaced claim made during his direct and cross
examinations to the effect that he did not really read the consent but signed it right away, and that by signing it he
only meant to give permission for the NBI agents to enter the room (and not to search) is hardly worthy of belief,
considering that prior to the search, he seemed to have been extra careful about who to let into the hotel room.
Thus, the full weight of the prosecution's testimonial evidence plus the large amount of prohibited drugs found,
must be given full force vis-a-vis Pua's claim of innocent presence in the hotel room, which is weak and not worthy
of credence.
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