People vs. City Court of Manila, Br. VI

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     P2,650.00 x 3 years P 95,400.

00
       GRAND TOTAL P223,685.50

No. L-36528. September 24,1987.*

THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, petitioner, vs. THE


CITY COURT OF MANILA, BRANCH VI and AGAPITO
GONZALES Y VENERACION, respondents.

Constitutional Law; Criminal Procedure; Double Jeopardy;


The defense of double jeopardy cannot prosper when there is no
identity of the offense charged.—Considering these diferences in
elements and

________________

* EN BANC.

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176 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED

People vs. City Court of Manila, Br. VI

nature, there is no identity of the offenses here involved for which


legal jeopardy in one may be invoked in the other. Evidence
required to prove one offense is not the same evidence required to
prove the other. The defense of double jeopardy cannot prosper.
As aptly put in People v. Doriquez: "It is a cardinal rule that the
protection against double jeopardy may be invoked only for the
same offense or identical offenses. A single act may offend against
two (or more) entirely distinct and unrelated provisions of law,
and if one provision requires proof of an additional fact or element
which the other does not, an acquittal or conviction or a dismissal
of the information under one does not bar prosecution under the
other. (People v. Bacolod, 89 Phil. 621; People v. Capurro, 7 Phil.
24). Phrased elsewhere, where two different laws (or articles of
the same code) define two crimes, prior jeopardy as to one of them
is no obstacle to a prosecution of the other, although both offenses
arise from the same facts, if each crime involves some important
act which is not an essential element of the other. (People v.
Alvarez, 45 Phil 472)."
Same; Same; Same; Failure to file motion to quash the
complaint or information before pleading thereto shall be taken as
a waiver of all objections which are grounds for a motion to quash
except when the complaint or information does not charge an
offense.— "SEC. 10. Failure to move to quash—Effect of—
Exception.—If the defendant does not move to quash the
complaint or information before he pleads thereto he shall be
taken to have waived all objections which are grounds for a
motion to quash except when the complaint or information does
not charge an offense, or the court is without jurisdiction of the
same. If, however, the defendant learns after he has pleaded or
has moved to quash on some other ground that the offense for
which he is now charged is an offense for which he has been
pardoned, or of which he has been convicted or acquitted or been
in jeopardy, the court may in its discretion entertain at any time
before judgment a motion to quash on the ground of such pardon,
conviction, acquittal or jeopardy."
Same; Same; Same; An appeal by the prosecution from the
order of dismissal by the trial court shall not constitute double
jeopardy.—The People (petitioner) rightly appealed the dismissal
of Criminal Case No. F-147348. For, as ruled in People v.
Desalisa: " As a general rule, the dismissal or termination of a
case after arraignment and plea of the def endant to a valid
information shall be a bar to another prosecution for the offense
charged, or for any attempt to commit the same or frustration
thereof, or for any offense which

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VOL. 154, SEPTEMBER 24, 1987 177

People vs. City Court of Manila, Br. VI

necessarily includes or is necessarily included in the complaint or


information (Sec. 9, Rule 113). However, an appeal by the
prosecution from the order of dismissal (of the criminal case) by
the trial court shall not constitute double jeopardy if (1) the
dismissal is made upon motion, or with the express consent, of the
defendant, and (2) the dismissal is not an acquittal or based upon
consideration of the evidence or of the merits of the case; and (3)
the question to be passed upon by the appellate court is purely
legal so that should the dismissal be found incorrect, the case
would have to be remanded to the court of origin for further
proceedings, to determine the guilt or innocence of the defendant.''

PETITION for certiorari to review the order of the City


Court of Manila, Br. VI.

The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.

PADILLA, J.:
Petition for review on certiorari to set aside the order of the
respondent City Court of Manila, Branch VI, dated 20
January 1973, dismissing the information (for violation of
Article 201 (3) of the Revised Penal Code) against the
accused, herein respondent Agapito Gonzales, in Criminal
Case No. F-147348 and its amended order, dated 16 March
1973, denying petitioner's motion for reconsideration of the
first order.
Respondent Agapito Gonzales, together with Roberto
Pangilinan, was accused of violating Section 7, in relation
to Section 11, Republic Act No. 3060 and Article 201 (3) of
the Revised Penal Code, in two (2) separate informations
filed with the City Court of Manila on 4 April 1972.
On 7 April 1972, before arraignment in the two (2) cases,
the City Fiscal amended the information in Criminal Case
No, F147347 (for violation of Section 7 in relation to
Section 11, Rep. Act No. 3060), by alleging that the
accused,

conspiring, and confederating together, and mutually helping


each other did then and there willfully, unlawfully, and
feloniously publicly exhibit and cause to be publicly exhibited . . ,
completed composite prints of motion film, of the 8 mm. size, in
color forming visual moving images on the projection screen
through the mechanical application of the projection equipment,
which motion pictures have never

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178 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


People vs. City Court of Manila, Br. VI

been previously submitted to the Board of Censors for Motion


Pictures for preview, examination and censorship, nor duly
passed by said Board, in a public place, to wit: at Room 309, De
Leon Building, Raon Street corner Rizal A venue, [Manila].

On the other hand, the information in Criminal Case No.


F147348 (for violation of Article 201 (3) of the Revised
Penal Code) was amended to allege that, on the same date,
16 July 1971, the same accused,

conspiring and confederating together and actually helping each


other, did then and there willfully, unlawfully, feloniously and
publicly exhibit, through the mechanical application of movie
projection equipment and the use of projection screen, indecent
and immoral motion picture scenes, to wit: motion pictures of the
8 mm. size, in color, depicting and showing scenes of totally naked
female and male persons with exposed private parts doing the sex
act in various lewd and lascivious positions, among other
similarly and equally obscene and morally offensive scenes, in a
place open to public view, to wit: at Room 309, De Leon Building,
Raon Street corner Rizal Avenue, [Manila].
On 31 May 1972, upon arraignment, accused Agapito
Gonzales pleaded not guilty to both charges. The other
accused, Roberto Pangilinan, was not arraigned as he was
(and he still is) at large.
On 26 June 1972, accused Agapito Gonzales filed a
motion to quash the informations in the two (2) cases, on
the ground that said informations did not charge an
offense. The motion was denied on 17 July 1972 and the
cases were set for trial on 7 August 1972.
No hearing was held on 7 August 1972, however, as the
accused moved for postponement of the trial set on said
date and the trial set on two (2) other dates. On 15
November 1972, the accused Gonzales moved for
permission to withdraw his plea of "not guilty" in Criminal
Case No. F-147348, without however, substituting or
entering another plea. The Court granted the motion and
reset the hearing of the cases for 27 December 1972.
On 27 December 1972, accused Gonzales moved to quash
the information in Criminal Case No. F-147348 on the
ground
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VOL, 154, SEPTEMBER 24, 1987 179


People vs. City Court of Manila, Br. VI

of double jeopardy, as there was according to him, also


pending against him Criminal Case No. F-1 47347, for
violation of Rep. Act No. 3060, where the information
allegedly contains the same allegations as the information
in Criminal Case No. F-147348.
Petitioner opposed the motion to quash but the
respondent City Court, in an order, dated 20 January 1973.
dismissed the case (Criminal Case No. F-1 47348) stating
thus:

In one case (F-147347), the basis of the charge is a special law,


Rep. Act No. 3060. In the other case (F-147348), the basis of the
same is the pertinent provision of the Revised Penal Code.
Considering that the allegations in the information of said cases
are identical, the plea entered in one case by the accused herein
can be reasonably seen as exposing him to double jeopardy in the
other case, as said allegations therein are not only similar but
[sic] identical facts.

After the dismissal of Criminal Case No. F-147348, or on 7


February 1973, in Criminal Case No. F-147347, the
accused changed his plea of "not guilty" and entered a plea
of "guilty" for violation of Rep, Act No. 3060. He was
accordingly sentenced to pay a fine of P600.00.
On 10 February 1973, petitioner filed a motion for
reconsideration of the order of 20 January 1973, dismissing
Criminal Case No. F-147348. This was however denied by
respondent court in its order dated 15 March 1973, and in
its amended order dated 16 March 1973; hence, this
petition for review on certiorari.
Petitioner contends that the accused could not invoke
the constitutional guarantee against double jeopardy, when
there had been no conviction, acquittal, dismissal or
termination of 1
criminal proceedings in another case for the
same offense. The respondent, on the other hand, argues
that conviction or acquittal in, or dismissal or termination
of a first case is not

_______________

1 Const. (1973), Art. IV, Sec. 22: "No person shall be twice put in
jeopardy of punishment for the same offense. If an act is punished by a
law or an ordinance, conviction or acquittal under either shall constitute a
bar to another prosecution for the same offense." Reiterated in the 1987
Constitution as Art. III, Sec. 21.

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180 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


People us. City Court of Manila, Br. VI

necessary, so long as he had been put in jeopardy of being 2


convicted or acquitted in the first case of the same offense.
It is a settled rule that to raise the defense of double
jeopardy, three requisites must be present: (1) a first
jeopardy must have attached prior to the second; (2) the
first jeopardy must have been validly terminated; and (3)
the second jeopardy must be for the same offense, or the
second offense includes or is necessarily included in the
offense charged in the first information, or is an attempt to
commit the same or a frustration thereof.
All these requisites do not exist in this case.
The two (2) informations with which the accused was
charged, do not make out only one offense, contrary to
private respondent's allegations. In other words, the
offense defined in section 7 of Rep. Act No. 3060 punishing
the exhibition of motion pictures not duly passed by the
Board of Censors for Motion Pictures does not include or is
not included in the offense defined in Article 201 (3) of the
Revised Penal Code punishing the exhibition of indecent
and immoral motion pictures.
The two (2) offenses do not constitute a jeopardy to each
other. A scrutiny of the two (2) laws involved would show
that the two (2) offenses are different and distinct from
each other. The relevant provisions of Rep. Act No. 3060
state:
"Sec. 7. It shall be unlawful for any person or entity to exhibit or
cause to be exhibited in any motion picture theater or public
place, or by television within the Philippines any motion picture,
including trailers, stills, and other pictorial advertisements in
connection with motion pictures, not duly passed by the Board; or
to print or cause to be printed on any motion picture to be
exhibited in any theater, or public place or by television, a label or
notice showing the same to have been previously passed by the
said Board when the same has not been previously authorized,
except motion pictures imprinted or

_______________

2 Rule 117, Sec. 2 of the Revised Rules of Court states: "Motion to quash-
Grounds—The defendant may move to quash the complaint or information on any
of the following grounds: x x x (h) that the defendant has been previously convicted
or in jeopardy of being convicted, or acquitted of the offense charged." Reiterated
in the 1985 Rules on Criminal Procedure ("1985 Rules")

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VOL. 154, SEPTEMBER 24, 1987 181


People vs. City Court of Manila, Br. VI

exhibited by the Philippine Government and/or its departments


and agencies, and newsreels."
"Sec. 11. Any violation of Section seven of this Act shall be
punished by imprisonment of not less than six months but not
more than two years, or by a fine of not less than six hundred nor
more than two thousand pesos, or both at the discretion of the
court. If the offender is an alien, he shall be deported
immediately. The license to operate the movie theater or
television shall also be revoked. Any other kind of violation shall
be punished by imprisonment of not less than one month nor
more than three months or a fine of not less than one hundred
pesos nor more than three hundred pesos, or both at the
discretion of the court. In case the violation is committed by a cor
poration, partnership or association, the criminal liability shall
devolve upon the president, manager, administrator, or any
official thereof responsible for the violation."

On the other hand, Article 201 (3) of the Revised Penal


Code provides:

Art. 201. Immoral doctrines, obscene publications and exhibitions.


—The penalty of prision correccional in its minimum period, or a
fine ranging from 200 to 2,000 pesos, or both, shall be imposed
upon:
x x x 3. Those who in theaters, fairs, cinematographs, or any
other place open to public view, shall exhibit indecent or immoral
plays, scenes, acts, or shows; x x x
It is evident that the elements of the two (2) offenses are
different The gravamen of the offense defined in Rep. Act
No. 3060 is the public exhibition of any motion picture
which has not been previously passed by the Board of
Censors for Motion Pictures. The motion picture may not be
indecent or immoral, but if it has not been previously
approved by the3 Board, its public showing constitutes a
criminal offense. On the other

________________

3 As a matter of interest, sec. 3 of Rep. Act 3060 empowers the Board of


Censors "[t]o screen, censor, examine and supervise the examination of,
approve of disapprove or delete portions from, and/or prohibit the
introduction and exhibition of motion pictures, imported or produced in
the Philippines for non-theatrical, theatrical and television distribution
which in its judgment are immoral, indecent, contrary to law, and/or good
customs, or injurious to the prestige of the Republic of the Philippines and
its people."

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182 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


People vs. City Court of Manila, Br. VI

hand, the offense punished in Article 201 (3) of the Revised


Penal Code is the public showing of indecent or immoral 4
plays, scenes, acts, or shows, not just motion pictures.
The nature of both offenses also shows their essential
difference. The crime punished in Rep. Act No. 3060 is a
malum prohibitum in which criminal intent need not be
proved because it is presumed, while the offense punished
in Article 201 (3) of the Revised Penal Code is malum in se,
in which criminal intent is an indispensable ingredient.
Considering these differences in elements and nature,
there is no identity of the offenses here involved for which5
legal jeopardy in one may be invoked in the other.
Evidence required to prove one offense is not the same
evidence required to prove the other. The defense of double
jeopardy 6 cannot prosper. As aptly put in People v.
Doriquez:

"It is a cardinal rule that the protection against double jeopardy


may be invoked only for the same offense or identical offenses. A
single act may offend against two (or more) entirely distinct and
unrelated provisions of law, and if one provision requires proof of
an additional fact or element which the other does not, an
acquittal or conviction or a dismissal of the information under one
does not bar prosecution under the other. (People v. Bacolod, 89
Phil. 621; People v. Capurro, 7 Phil. 24). Phrased elsewhere,
where two different laws (or articles of the same code) define two
crimes, prior jeopardy as to one of them is no obstacle to a
prosecution of the other, although both offenses arise from the
same facts, if each crime involves some important act which is not
an essential
7
element of the other. (People v. Alvarez, 45 Phil.
472). " (Emphasis supplied)

Petitioner also questions the propriety of allowing the


accused in Criminal Case No. F-147348 to withdraw his
plea of not guilty in order to file a motion to quash on the
ground of

_______________

4 In People v. Padan, 101 Phil. 749 (1957) the Court upheld the
conviction of persons who exhibited and performed highly immoral and
indecent acts before a crowd of one hundred persons who paid admission
to see the performance.
5 Cf. People v. Relova, G.R. No. L-45129, 6 March 1987.
6 G.R. No. L-24445-45, 29 July 1968,24 SCRA 163.
7 Id at 171.

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VOL. 154, SEPTEMBER 24, 1987 183


People vs. City Court of Manila, Br. VI

double jeopardy. Petitioner argues:

"It is true that on February 3, 1973, the trial court finally


convicted respondent Gonzales in Criminal Case No. F-147347 by
imposing on him a fine of P 600.00. But it is obvious that
respondent Gonzales's conviction in that case cannot retroactively
supply the ground for the dismissal of Criminal Case No. F-
147348.
But even if conviction in Criminal Case No. F-1 47347 preceded
the dismissal of Criminal Case No. F-147348, still that conviction
cannot bar the prosecution for violation of Article 201 (3) of the
Revised Penal Code, because, by pleading to the charge in
Criminal Case No. F-147348 without moving to quash the
information, the accused (now the respondent) Gonzales must be
taken to have waived the defense of double jeopardy, pursuant to
the provisions of Rule 117, section 10. (Barot v. Villamor, 105
Phil. 263 [1959]) It is only in cases where. after pleading or
moving to quash OR some other grounds, the accused learns for
the first time that the offense of which he is charged is an offense
for which he has been in jeopardy that the court may in its
discretion entertain at any time before judgment a motion to
quash on that ground. x x x In the case at bar, however, the fact is
that the accused (now the respondent Gonzales) was arraigned in
the same court. He, therefore, cannot claim ignorance of the
existence8 of another charge against him for supposedly the same
offense."
Petitioner's argument is well-taken. Sec. 10, Rule 117, of
the Rules of Court, before its amendment stated—

"SEC. 10. Failure to move to quash—Effect of—Exception.—If the


defendant does not move to quash the complaint or information
before he pleads thereto he shall be taken to have waived all
objections which are grounds for a motion to quash except when
the complaint or information does not charge an offense, or the
court is without jurisdiction of the same. If, however, the
defendant learns after he has pleaded or has moved to quash on
some other ground that the offense for which he is now charged is
an offense for which he has been pardoned, or of which he has
been convicted or acquitted or been in jeopardy, the court may in
its discretion entertain at any time before judgment a motion to
quash on the ground of such pardon, conviction, acquittal or
jeopardy." (Italics supplied)

_______________

8 Rollo at 59.

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184 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


People vs. City Court of Manila, Br. VI

However, it must be noted that, under the 1985 Rules, the


provision now reads as follows:

"Failure to move or quash or to allege any ground therefore. The


failure of the accused to assert any ground of a motion to quash
before he pleads to the complaint or information, either because
he did not file a motion to quash or failed to allege the same in
said motion, shall be deemed a waiver of the grounds for a motion
to quash, except the grounds of no offense charged, lack of
jurisdiction,
9
extinction of the offense or penalty, and jeopardy. x x
x"
The above, being an amendment favorable to the accused, the
benefit thereof can be extended to the accused-respondent.
However, whatever benefit he may derive from this amendment,
is also illusory. For, as previously noted, there is no double
jeopardy which gave rise to a valid motion to quash.

The People (petitioner) rightly appealed the dismissal of


Criminal 10Case No. F-1 47348. For, as ruled in People v.
Desalisa:

"As a general rule, the dismissal or termination of a case after


arraignment and plea of the defendant to a valid information
shall be a bar to another prosecution for the offense charged, or
for any attempt to commit the same or frustration thereof, or for
any offense which necessarily includes or is necessarily included
in the complaint or information (Sec. 9, Rule 113). However, an
appeal by the prosecution from the order of dismissal (of the
criminal case) by the trial court shall not constitute double
jeopardy if (1) the dismissal is made upon motion, or with the
express consent, of the defendant, and (2) the dismissal is not an
acquittal or based upon consideration of the evidence or of the
merits of the case; and (3) the question to be passed upon by the
appellate court is purely legal so that should the dismissal be
found incorrect, the case would have to be remanded to the court
of origin for further proceedings,
11
to determine the guilt or
innocence of the defendant. "

WHEREFORE, the petition is granted. The appealed

_______________

9 Rule 117, Sec. 8.


10 G.R. No. L-15516, Dec. 17, 1966, 125 Phil. 27 (1966). Not reported in
Supreme Court Reports Annotated (SCRA).
11 Id at 43.

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VOL. 154, SEPTEMBER 24, 1987 185


People vs. City Court of Manila, Br. VI

orders are hereby reversed reversed and set aside.


Criminal Case No, F147348 is ordered reinstated and
remanded to the respondent Court for trial acccording to
law.
SO ORDERED.

          Teehankee (C.J.), Yap, Fernan, Narvasa,


MelencioHerrera, Paras, Feliciano, Bidin, Sarmiento and
Cortés, JJ., concur,
     Gutierrez, Jr., J., I concur but I also join Justice I.A.
Cruz in his reservations about R. A. 3060.
     Cruz, J., see separate concurrence.
     Gancayco, J., on leave,

Petitioner granted Orders reversed and set aside,

CRUZ, J., concurring:

I fully concur with the ponencia of Mr. Justice Teodoro


Padilla but reserve judgment on Republic Act No. 3060, the
validity of which is here presumed, until its
constitutionality is squarely raised in an appropriate
proceeding for a full examination of its effects on freedom of
expression.

Notes.—There is no double jeopardy as case was


dismissed on motion of the accused. (People vs. Caruncho,
Jr., 127 SCRA 16.)
A void order of dismissal does not give rise to double
jeopardy. The original case for physical injuries should
proceed instead of a new information for frustrated
murder. (People vs. Mogol, 131 SCRA 296.)
There is no double jeopardy where petition for certiorari
by the Fiscal is to correct wrong penalty imposed by the
court and correction is favorable to accused. (People vs. Lee
Jr., 132 SCRA 66.)

——oOo——

186

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