Sanchez Vs Demetriou
Sanchez Vs Demetriou
Sanchez Vs Demetriou
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* EN BANC.
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dently of the office. Moreover, it is not even alleged in the information that
the commission of the crime charged was intimately connected with the
performance of the petitioner’s official functions to make it fall under the
exception laid down in People v. Montejo.
CRUZ, J.:
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The records of the hearings held on August 9 and 13, 1993, belie the
petitioner’s contention that he was not accorded the right to present
counter-affidavits.
During the preliminary investigation on August 9, 1993, the
petitioner’s counsel, Atty. Marciano Brion, manifested that his client
was waiving the presentation of a counter-affidavit, thus:
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ACSP Zuño:
For the record, we are furnishing to you the sworn statement of
witness Aurelio Centeno y Roxas and the sworn statement of
SPO3 Vivencio Malabanan y Angeles.
Do I understand from you that you are again waiving the
submission of counter-affidavit?
Atty. Panelo:
Yes.
ACSP Zuño:
So, in so far as the respondent, Mayor Antonio Sanchez
4
is
concerned, this case is submitted for resolution.
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held on August 13, 1993, was not Atty. Brion but Atty. Panelo.
The petitioner was present at that hearing and he never disowned
Atty. Panelo as his counsel. During the entire proceedings, he
remained quiet and let this counsel speak and argue on his behalf. It
was only in his tardy Reply that he has suddenly bestirred himself
and would now question his representation by this lawyer as
unauthorized and inofficious.
Section 3, paragraph (d), Rule 112 of the Rules of Court,
provides that if the respondent cannot be subpoenaed or, if
subpoenaed, does not submit counter-affidavits, the investigating
officer shall base his resolution on the evidence presented by the
complainant.
Just as the accused may5
renounce the right to be present at the
preliminary investigation, so may he waive the right to present
counter-affidavits or any other evidence in his defense.
At any rate, it is settled that the absence of a preliminary
investigation does not impair the validity of the information or
otherwise render the same defective and neither does it affect the
jurisdiction of the court 6over the case or constitute a ground for
quashing the information.
If no preliminary investigation has been held, or if it is flawed,
the trial court may, on motion of the accused, order an investigation
or reinvestigation
7
and hold the proceedings in the criminal cases in
abeyance. In the case at bar, however, the respondent judge saw no
reason or need for such a step. Finding no arbitrariness in her factual
conclusions, we shall defer to her judgment.
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5 Guzman v. People, 119 SCRA 337; Cruz v. Salva, 105 Phil. 1151.
6 Go v. Court of Appeals, 206 SCRA 138; Rodis v. Sandiganbayan, 166 SCRA
618; Sanciangco, Jr. v. People, 149 SCRA 1; People v. Gomez, 117 SCRA 72; People
v. Yutila, 102 SCRA 264; Solis v. People, 84 SCRA 377; People v. Figueroa, 27
SCRA 1239; People v. Casiano, 111 Phil. 73.
7 Go v. Court of Appeals, supra; Velasquez v. Tuquero, 182 SCRA 388; Crespo v.
Mogul, 151 SCRA 462; People v. La Caste, 37 SCRA 767
8 191 SCRA 545.
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tice are null and void because it had no jurisdiction over the case.
His claim is that it is the Office of the Ombudsman that is vested
with the power to conduct the investigation of all cases involving
public officers like him, as the municipal mayor of Calauan, Laguna.
The Ombudsman is indeed empowered under Section 15,
paragraph (1) of R.A. 6770 to investigate and prosecute any illegal
act or omission of any public official. However as9 we held only two
years ago in the case of Aguinaldo v. Domagas, this authority “is
not an exclusive authority but rather a shared or concurrent authority
in respect of the offense charged.”
Petitioners finally assert that the information and amended information filed
in this case needed the approval of the Ombudsman. It is not disputed that
the information and amended information here did not have the approval of
the Ombudsman. However, we do not believe that such approval was
necessary at all. In Deloso v. Domingo, 191 SCRA 545 (1990), the Court
held that the Ombudsman has authority to investigate charges of illegal acts
or omissions on the part of any public official, i.e., any crime imputed to a
public official. It must, however, be pointed out that the authority of the
Ombudsman to investigate “any [illegal] act or omission of any public
official” (191 SCRA at 550) is not an exclusive authority but rather a shared
or concurrent authority in respect of the offense here charged, i.e., the crime
of sedition. Thus, the non-involvement of the office of the Ombudsman in
the present case does not have any adverse legal consequence upon the
authority of the panel of prosecutors to file and prosecute the information or
amended information.
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It may not be amiss to observe that under R.A. No. 7438, the
requisites of a “custodial investigation” are applicable even to a
person not formally arrested but merely “invited” for questioning.
It should likewise be noted that at Camp Vicente Lim, the
petitioner was placed on “arrest status” after he was pointed to by
Centeno and Malabanan as the person who first raped Mary Aileen
Sarmenta. Respondent Zuno himself acknowledged during the
August 13, 1993 hearing that, on the basis of the sworn statements
of the two state witnesses, the petitioner had been “arrested.”
We agree with the petitioner that his arrest did not come under
Section 5, Rule 113 of the Rules of Court, providing as follows:
It is not denied that the arresting officers were not present when the
petitioner allegedly participated in the killing of Allan Gomez and
the rape-slay of Mary Eileen Sarmenta. Neither did they have any
personal knowledge that the petitioner was responsible therefor
because the basis of the arrest was the sworn statements of Centeno
and Malabanan. Moreover, as the rape and killing of Sarmenta
allegedly took place on June 28-June 29, 1993, or forty-six days
before the date of the arrest, it cannot be said that the offense had “in
fact just been committed” when the petitioner was arrested.
The original warrantless arrest of the petitioner was doubtless
illegal. Nevertheless, the Regional Trial Court lawfully acquired
jurisdiction over the person of the petitioner by virtue of the
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Sanchez vs. Demetriou
warrant of arrest it issued on August 26, 1993 against him and the
other accused in connection with the rape-slay cases. It was belated,
to be sure, but it was nonetheless legal.
Even on the assumption that no warrant was issued at all, we find
that the trial court still lawfully acquired jurisdiction over the person
of the petitioner. The rule is that if the accused objects to the
jurisdiction of the court over his person, he may move to quash the
information, but only on that ground. If, as in this case, the accused
raises other grounds in the motion to quash, he is deemed to have
waived that objection 14and to have submitted his person to the
jurisdiction of the court.
The Court notes that on August 13, 1993, after the petitioner was
unlawfully arrested, Judge Lanzanas issued a warrant of arrest
against Antonio L. Sanchez in connection with Criminal Cases 15
Nos.
93-124634 to 93-124637 for violation of R.A. No. 6713. Pending
the issuance of the warrant of arrest for the rape-slay cases, this first
warrant served as the initial justification for his detention.
The Court also adverts to its uniform ruling that the filing of
charges, and the issuance of the corresponding warrant of arrest,
against a person invalidly detained will cure the defect of that
detention or** at least deny him the right to be released because of
such defect. Applicable by analogy to the case at bar is Rule 102
Section 4 of the Rules of Court that:
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14 Regalado, Remedial Law Compendium Book 2, 1989 Ed., p. 318 citing 22 C.J.S. 1961
Ed., p. 418.
15 Annex 1, Comment.
** The writer of this opinion has objected to this ruling but without success. While
maintaining his dissent in this case, he nevertheless must acknowledge the binding character of
this doctrine.
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Nor shall anything in this rule be held to authorize the discharge of a person
charged with or convicted of an offense in the Philippines or of a person
suffering imprisonment under lawful judgment.
16
In one case, the petitioner sued on habeas corpus on the ground
that she had been arrested by virtue of a John Doe warrant. In their
return, the respondents declared that a new warrant specifically
naming her had been issued, thus validating her detention. While
frowning at the tactics of the respondents, the Court said:
The case has, indeed, become moot and academic inasmuch as the new
warrant of arrest complies with the requirements of the Constitution and the
Rules of Court regarding the particular description of the person to be
arrested, While the first warrant was unquestionably void, being a general
warrant, release of the petitioner for that reason will be a futile act as it will
be followed by her immediate rearrest pursuant to the new and valid
warrant, returning her to the same prison she will just have left. This Court
will not participate in such a meaningless charade.
17
The same doctrine has been consistently
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followed by the Court,
more recently in the Umil case.
The Informations
The petitioner submits that the seven informations charging seven
separate homicides are absurd because the two victims in these cases
could not have died seven times.
This argument was correctly refuted by the Solicitor General in
this wise:
Thus, where there are two or more offenders who commit rape, the
homicide committed on the occasion or by reason of each rape, must
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Rape with homicide comes within the exception under RA. 2632
and R.A. 4111, amending the Revised Penal Code.
The petitioner and his six co-accused are not charged with only
one rape committed by him in conspiracy with the other six. Each
one of the seven accused is charged with having himself raped
Sarmenta instead of simply helping Sanchez in committing only one
rape. In other words, the allegation of the prosecution is that the girl
was raped seven times, with each of the seven accused taking turns
in abusing her with the assistance of the other six. Afterwards, their
lust satisfied, all seven of them decided to kill and thus silence
Sarmenta.
Every one of the seven accused is being charged separately for
actually raping Sarmenta and later killing her instead of merely
assisting the petitioner in raping and then slaying her. The separate
informations filed against each of them allege that each of the seven
successive rapes is complexed by the subsequent slaying of
Sarmenta and aggravated by the killing of Allan Gomez by her
seven attackers. The separate rapes were committed in succession by
the seven accused, culminating in the slaying of Sarmenta.
It is of course absurd to suggest that Mary Eileen Sarmenta and
Allan Gomez were killed seven times, but the informations
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The crime of rape with homicide with which the petitioner stands
charged obviously does not fall under paragraph (1), which deals
with graft and corruption cases. Neither is it covered by paragraph
(2) because it is not an offense committed in
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[T]he relation between the crime and the office contemplated by the
Constitution is, in our opinion, direct and not accidental. To fall into the
intent of the Constitution, the relation has to be such that, in the legal sense,
the offense cannot exist without the office. In other words, the office must
be a constituent element of the crime as defined in the statute, such as, for
instance, the crimes defined and punished in Chapter Two to Six, Title
Seven, of the Revised Penal Code.
Public office is not of the essence of murder. The taking of human life is
either murder or homicide whether done by a private citizen or public
servant, and the penalty is the same except when the perpetrator, being a
public functionary, took advantage of his office, as alleged in this case, in
which event the penalty is increased.
But the use or abuse of office does not adhere to the crime as an element;
and even as an aggravating circumstance, its materiality arises, not from the
allegations but on the proof, not from the fact that the criminals are public
officials but from the manner of the commission of the crime.
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24 90 Phil. 49.
25 108 Phil. 613.
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Conclusion
As above demonstrated, all of the grounds invoked by the petitioner
are not supported by the facts and the applicable law and
jurisprudence. They must, therefore, all be rejected. In consequence,
the respondent judge, who has started the trial of the criminal cases
against the petitioner and his co-accused, may proceed therewith
without further hindrance.
It remains to stress that the decision we make today is not a
decision on the merits of the criminal cases being tried below. These
will have to be decided by the respondent judge in accordance with
the evidence that is still being received. At this time, there is yet no
basis for judgment, only uninformed conjecture. The Court will
caution against such irrelevant public speculations as they can be
based only on imperfect knowledge if not
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officious ignorance.
WHEREFORE, the petition is DISMISSED. The respondent
judge is DIRECTED to continue with the trial of Criminal Cases
Nos. 101141, 101142, 101143, 101144, 101145, 101146 and 101147
and to decide them with deliberate dispatch.
SO ORDERED.
Petition dismissed.
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