Secretary of Justice v. Lantion
Secretary of Justice v. Lantion
Secretary of Justice v. Lantion
SYNOPSIS
SYLLABUS
RESOLUTION
PUNO , J : p
On January 18, 2000, by a vote of 9-6, we dismissed the petition at bar and ordered
the petitioner to furnish private respondent copies of the extradition request and its
supporting papers and to grant him a reasonable period within which to le his comment
with supporting evidence. 1
On February 3, 2000, the petitioner timely led an Urgent Motion for
Reconsideration. He assails the decision on the following grounds:
"The majority decision failed to appreciate the following facts and points
of substance and of value which, if considered, would alter the result of the case,
thus: Cdpr
II. Absence of notice and hearing during the evaluation process will not
result in a denial of fundamental fairness.
IV. The deliberate omission of the notice and hearing requirement in the
Philippine Extradition Law is intended to prevent flight.
V. There is a need to balance the interest between the discretionary powers
of government and the rights of an individual.
VI. The instances cited in the assailed majority decision when the twin
rights of notice and hearing may be dispensed with in this case results in a non
sequitur conclusion.
VII. Jimenez is not placed in imminent danger of arrest by the Executive
Branch necessitating notice and hearing.
It is of judicial notice that the summons includes the petition for extradition which will
be answered by the extraditee.
There is no provision in the RP-US Extradition Treaty and in P.D. No. 1069 which
gives an extraditee the right to demand from the petitioner Secretary of Justice copies of
the extradition request from the US government and its supporting documents and to
comment thereon while the request is still undergoing evaluation. We cannot write a
provision in the treaty giving private respondent that right where there is none. It is well-
settled that a "court cannot alter, amend, or add to a treaty by the insertion of any clause,
small or great, or dispense with any of its conditions and requirements or take away any
quali cation, or integral part of any stipulation, upon any motion of equity, or general
convenience, or substantial justice." 4
Second. All treaties, including the RP-US Extradition Treaty, should be interpreted in
light of their intent. Nothing less than the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties to
which the Philippines is a signatory provides that "a treaty shall be interpreted in good faith
in accordance with the ordinary meaning to be given to the terms of the treaty in their
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context and in light of its object and purpose. " 5 (italics supplied) The preambular
paragraphs of P.D. No. 1069 define its intent, viz:
"WHEREAS, under the Constitution[,] the Philippines adopts the generally
accepted principles of international law as part of the law of the land, and
adheres to the policy of peace, equality, justice, freedom, cooperation and amity
with all nations;
WHEREAS, the suppression of crime is the concern not only of the state
where it is committed but also of any other state to which the criminal may have
escaped, because it saps the foundation of social life and is an outrage upon
humanity at large, and it is in the interest of civilized communities that crimes
should not go unpunished;
It cannot be gainsaid that today, countries like the Philippines forge extradition treaties
to arrest the dramatic rise of international and transnational crimes like terrorism and
drug tra cking. Extradition treaties provide the assurance that the punishment of
these crimes will not be frustrated by the frontiers of territorial sovereignty. Implicit in
the treaties should be the unbending commitment that the perpetrators of these
crimes will not be coddled by any signatory state.
It ought to follow that the RP-US Extradition Treaty calls for an interpretation that
will minimize if not prevent the escape of extraditees from the long arm of the law and
expedite their trial. The submission of the private respondent, that as a probable extraditee
under the RP-US Extradition Treaty he should be furnished a copy of the US government
request for his extradition and its supporting documents even while they are still under
evaluation by petitioner Secretary of Justice, does not meet this desideratum. The fear of
the petitioner Secretary of Justice that the demanded notice is equivalent to a notice to
ee must be deeply rooted on the experience of the executive branch of our government.
As it comes from the branch of our government in charge of the faithful execution of our
laws, it deserves the careful consideration of this Court. In addition, it cannot be gainsaid
that private respondent's demand for advance notice can delay the summary process of
executive evaluation of the extradition request and its accompanying papers. The foresight
of Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes did not miss this danger. In 1911, he held:
"It is common in extradition cases to attempt to bring to bear all the
factitious niceties of a criminal trial at common law. But it is a waste of time . . . if
there is presented, even in somewhat untechnical form according to our ideas,
such reasonable ground to suppose him guilty as to make it proper that he should
be tried, good faith to the demanding government requires his surrender." 6 (italics
supplied)
We erode no right of an extraditee when we do not allow time to stand still on his
prosecution. Justice is best served when done without delay.
Third. An equally compelling factor to consider is the understanding of the parties
themselves to the RP-US Extradition Treaty as well as the general interpretation of the
issue in question by other countries with similar treaties with the Philippines. The rule is
recognized that while courts have the power to interpret treaties, the meaning given them
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by the departments of government particularly charged with their negotiation and
enforcement is accorded great weight. 7 The reason for the rule is laid down in Santos III v.
Northwest Orient Airlines, et al. , 8 where we stressed that a treaty is a joint executive
legislative act which enjoys the presumption that "it was rst carefully studied and
determined to be constitutional before it was adopted and given the force of law in the
country."
Our executive department of government, thru the Department of Foreign Affairs
(DFA) and the Department of Justice (DOJ), has steadfastly maintained that the RP-US
Extradition Treaty and P.D. No. 1069 do not grant the private respondent a right to notice
and hearing during the evaluation stage of an extradition process. 9 This understanding of
the treaty is shared by the US government, the other party to the treaty. 1 0 This
interpretation by the two governments cannot be given scant signi cance. It will be
presumptuous for the Court to assume that both governments did not understand the
terms of the treaty they concluded.
Yet, this is not all. Other countries with similar extradition treaties with the
Philippines have expressed the same interpretation adopted by the Philippine and US
governments. Canadian 1 1 and Hongkong 1 2 authorities, thru appropriate note verbales
communicated to our Department of Foreign Affairs, stated in unequivocal language that it
is not an international practice to afford a potential extraditee with a copy of the
extradition papers during the evaluation stage of the extradition process. We cannot
disregard such a convergence of views unless it is manifestly erroneous.
Fourth. Private respondent, however, peddles the postulate that he must be afforded
the right to notice and hearing as required by our Constitution. He buttresses his position
by likening an extradition proceeding to a criminal proceeding and the evaluation stage to
a preliminary investigation.
We are not persuaded. An extradition proceeding is sui generis. It is not a criminal
proceeding which will call into operation all the rights of an accused as guaranteed by the
Bill of Rights. To begin with, the process of extradition does not involve the determination
of the guilt or innocence of an accused. 1 3 His guilt or innocence will be adjudged in the
court of the state where he will be extradited. Hence, as a rule, constitutional rights that are
only relevant to determine the guilt or innocence of an accused cannot be invoked by an
extraditee especially by one whose extradition papers are still undergoing evaluation. 1 4 As
held by the US Supreme Court in United States v. Galanis:
"An extradition proceeding is not a criminal prosecution, and the
constitutional safeguards that accompany a criminal trial in this country do not
shield an accused from extradition pursuant to a valid treaty." 1 5
"PROVISIONAL ARREST
1. In case of urgency, a Contracting Party may request the provisional
arrest of the person sought pending presentation of the request for extradition. A
request for provisional arrest may be transmitted through the diplomatic channel
or directly between the Philippine Department of Justice and the United States
Department of Justice.
Both the RP-US Extradition Treaty and P.D. No. 1069 clearly provide that private
respondent may be provisionally arrested only pending receipt of the request for
extradition. Our DFA has long received the extradition request from the United States and
has turned it over to the DOJ. It is undisputed that until today, the United States has not
requested for private respondent's provisional arrest. Therefore, the threat to private
respondent's liberty has passed. It is more imagined than real.
Nor can the threat to private respondent's liberty come from Section 6 of P.D. No.
1069, which provides:
"Sec. 6. Issuance of Summons; Temporary Arrest; Hearing, Service of
Notices. — (1) Immediately upon receipt of the petition, the presiding judge of the
court shall, as soon as practicable, summon the accused to appear and to answer
the petition on the day and hour xed in the order. [ H]e may issue a warrant for
the immediate arrest of the accused which may be served anywhere within the
Philippines if it appears to the presiding judge that the immediate arrest and
temporary detention of the accused will best serve the ends of justice.
(2) The order and notice as well as a copy of the warrant of arrest, if
issued, shall be promptly served each upon the accused and the attorney having
charge of the case." (italics supplied)
It is evident from the above provision that a warrant of arrest for the temporary
detention of the accused pending the extradition hearing may only be issued by the
presiding judge of the extradition court upon ling of the petition for extradition . As the
extradition process is still in the evaluation stage of pertinent documents and there is no
certainty that a petition for extradition will be led in the appropriate extradition court, the
threat to private respondent's liberty is merely hypothetical.
Sixth. To be sure, private respondent's plea for due process deserves serious
consideration involving as it does his primordial right to liberty. His plea to due process,
however, collides with important state interests which cannot also be ignored for they
serve the interest of the greater majority. The clash of rights demands a delicate balancing
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of interests approach which is a "fundamental postulate of constitutional law." 2 5 The
approach requires that we "take conscious and detailed consideration of the interplay of
interests observable in a given situation or type of situation." 2 6 These interests usually
consist in the exercise by an individual of his basic freedoms on the one hand, and the
government's promotion of fundamental public interest or policy objectives on the other.
27
In the case at bar, on one end of the balancing pole is the private respondent's claim
to due process predicated on Section 1, Article III of the Constitution, which provides that
"No person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law . . ."
Without a bubble of doubt, procedural due process of law lies at the foundation of a
civilized society which accords paramount importance to justice and fairness. It has to be
accorded the weight it deserves.
This brings us to the other end of the balancing pole. Petitioner avers that the Court
should give more weight to our national commitment under the RP-US Extradition Treaty to
expedite the extradition to the United States of persons charged with violation of some of
its laws. Petitioner also emphasizes the need to defer to the judgment of the Executive on
matters relating to foreign affairs in order not to weaken if not violate the principle of
separation of powers.
Considering that in the case at bar, the extradition proceeding is only at its
evaluation stage, the nature of the right being claimed by the private respondent is
nebulous and the degree of prejudice he will allegedly suffer is weak, we accord greater
weight to the interests espoused by the government thru the petitioner Secretary of
Justice. In Angara v. Electoral Commission, we held that the "Constitution has blocked out
with deft strokes and in bold lines, allotment of power to the executive, the legislative and
the judicial departments of the government." 2 8 Under our constitutional scheme, executive
power is vested in the President of the Philippines. 2 9 Executive power includes, among
others, the power to contract or guarantee foreign loans and the power to enter into
treaties or international agreements. 3 0 The task of safeguarding that these treaties are
duly honored devolves upon the executive department which has the competence and
authority to so act in the international arena. 3 1 It is traditionally held that the President has
power and even supremacy over the country's foreign relations. 3 2 The executive
department is aptly accorded deference on matters of foreign relations considering the
President's most comprehensive and most confidential information about the international
scene of which he is regularly briefed by our diplomatic and consular o cials. His access
to ultra-sensitive military intelligence data is also unlimited. 3 3 The deference we give to
the executive department is dictated by the principle of separation of powers. This
principle is one of the cornerstones of our democratic government. It cannot be eroded
without endangering our government.
The Philippines also has a national interest to help in suppressing crimes and one
way to do it is to facilitate the extradition of persons covered by treaties duly entered by
our government. More and more, crimes are becoming the concern of one world. Laws
involving crimes and crime prevention are undergoing universalization. One manifest
purpose of this trend towards globalization is to deny easy refuge to a criminal whose
activities threaten the peace and progress of civilized countries. It is to the great interest
of the Philippines to be part of this irreversible movement in light of its vulnerability to
crimes, especially transnational crimes.
In tilting the balance in favor of the interests of the State, the Court stresses that it is
not ruling that the private respondent has no right to due process at all throughout the
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length and breadth of the extrajudicial proceedings. Procedural due process requires a
determination of what process is due, when it is due, and the degree of what is due. Stated
otherwise, a prior determination should be made as to whether procedural protections are
at all due and when they are due, which in turn depends on the extent to which an individual
will be "condemned to suffer grievous loss." 3 4 We have explained why an extraditee has no
right to notice and hearing during the evaluation stage of the extradition process. As
aforesaid, P.D. No. 1069 which implements the RP-US Extradition Treaty affords an
extraditee sufficient opportunity to meet the evidence against him once the petition is led
in court. The time for the extraditee to know the basis of the request for his extradition is
merely moved to the ling in court of the formal petition for extradition. The extraditee's
right to know is momentarily withheld during the evaluation stage of the extradition
process to accommodate the more compelling interest of the State to prevent escape of
potential extraditees which can be precipitated by premature information of the basis of
the request for his extradition. No less compelling at that stage of the extradition
proceedings is the need to be more deferential to the judgment of a co-equal branch of the
government, the Executive, which has been endowed by our Constitution with greater
power over matters involving our foreign relations. Needless to state, this balance of
interests is not a static but a moving balance which can be adjusted as the extradition
process moves from the administrative stage to the judicial stage and to the execution
stage depending on factors that will come into play. In sum, we rule that the temporary
hold on private respondent's privilege of notice and hearing is a soft restraint on his right
to due process which will not deprive him of fundamental fairness should he decide to
resist the request for his extradition to the United States. There is no denial of due process
as long as fundamental fairness is assured a party. DHcTaE
Separate Opinions
MELO , J., dissenting :
On January 18, 2000, I was one of the nine (9) members of the Court who voted to
dismiss the petition of the Secretary of Justice. My vote was intended to grant any Filipino
citizen, not Mr. Mark Jimenez alone, a fair and early opportunity to nd out why he should
be forcibly extradited from his homeland to face criminal trial in a foreign country with all
its unfamiliar and formidable consequences.
After going over the grounds given by the Government in support of the motion for
reconsideration, I regret that I cannot go along with the new ruling of the Court's recent
majority. I am convinced that there is greater reason to strike the balance in favor of a
solitary beleaguered individual against the exertion of overwhelming Government power by
both the Philippines and the United States. To grant the respondent his right to know will
not, in any signi cant way, weaken or frustrate compliance with treaty objectives. But it will
result in jurisprudence which reasserts national dignity and gives meaningful protection to
the rights of any citizen who is presumed innocent until proven guilty.
The basic considerations behind my vote to deny the petition have not changed
inspite of the detailed explanations in the motion for reconsideration. On the contrary, I
recognize the grant of the respondent's request even more justified and compelling.
In the rst place, I nd nothing unreasonable, illegal or repugnant for a man about to
be brought to trial to ask for the charges raised against him. It is a perfectly natural and to-
be-expected request. There is also nothing in the RP-US Extradition Treaty that expressly
prohibits the giving of such information to an extraditee before trial. On the other hand, its
grant is in keeping with basic principles of fairness and even-handed justice.
I nd petitioner's reasons for rejecting the exercise of the right to know as more
illusory than real. Delay is not an issue. Delays were incurred in the United States before the
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request for extradition was finalized. Delays in the Philippines are inevitable unless a skilled
prosecutor and a competent Judge will ably control the course of the trial in a court with
clogged dockets. It is these delays that should be addressed. Why should a few days given
to an "accused" to study the charges against him be categorized as unwarranted and
intolerable delay?
I reject the argument that public interest, international commitments and national
dignity would be compromised if Mr. Mark B. Jimenez is shown the extradition treaty so he
can more adequately prepare his defense. Merely raising insuperable grounds does not
insure their validity. I nd the above concerns totally inapplicable under the circumstances
of this case.
I beg the Court's indulgence as I discuss one by one the reasons for the Court's
change of mind and the grounds for the grant of the motion for reconsideration.
I dissent from the rst ground which implies that a claim shall be rejected and a
protection may not be allowed if it is not found in the express provisions of the RP-US
Extradition Treaty. It should be the other way around. Any right not prohibited by the Treaty
which arises from Philippine law, custom or traditions of decency and fairness should be
granted and not denied. The referral by the Department of Foreign Affairs to the
Department of Justice and the high pro le collaboration between the two powerful
Departments, found in Presidential Decree No. 1069, is not also provided for in the Treaty.
Does that mean it is prohibited?
There is no provision in the Treaty which mandates that an extraditee should be kept
in the dark about the charges against him until he is brought to trial. The Treaty deals only
with the trial proper. It cannot possibly cover everything. Our law and jurisprudence are not
superseded by the mere absence of a speci c provision in a treaty. What is not prohibited
should be allowed.
The respondent is not asking for any favor which interferes with the evaluation of an
extradition request. While two powerful institutions, the Department of Foreign Affairs and
the Department of Justice, are plotting the course of a citizen's life or liberty, I see no
reason why the person involved should not be given an early opportunity to prepare for
trial. There is no alteration or amendment of any Treaty provision. Section 6 of Presidential
Decree No. 1069, which provides for service of the summons and the warrant of arrest
once the extradition court takes over, is a minimum requirement for the extraditee's
protection. Why should it be used against him? Why should it be treated as a prohibition
against the enjoyment of rights to which a citizen may be entitled under a liberal
interpretation of our laws, treaties and procedures?
With all due respect, I nd the second reason in the Court's Resolution, ostensibly
based on the intent behind the RP-US Extradition Treaty, to be inapplicable, exaggerated
and unfair. Does the grant of an early opportunity to prepare for one's defense really
diminish our country's commitment to the suppression of crime ? How can a person's right
to know what blows will strike him next be a State's coddling of a perpetrator of a crime?
Why should the odious crimes of terrorism and drug tra cking be used as in ammatory
arguments to decide cases of more subjective and problematical offenses like tax evasion
or illegal election campaign contributions? Terrorism and drug tra cking are capital
offenses in the Philippines. There should be no legal obstacles to speedily placing behind
bars a Filipino terrorist or drug dealer or summarily deporting a non-citizen as an
undesirable alien. But this should in no way lessen a greater care and more humane
handling of an offense not as clear-cut or atrocious. The use of epithetical arguments is
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unfair.
In this particular case, it is not the respondent's request for copies of the charges
which is delaying the extradition process. Delay is caused by the cumbersome procedures
coupled with ostentatious publicity adopted by two big Departments — the Department of
Foreign Affairs and the Department of Justice — to evaluate what is really a simple
question: whether or not to le extradition proceedings. But we are unfairly laying the
blame on Mark Jimenez and using it as an excuse to deny a basically reasonable request
which is to him of paramount importance. SDTcAH
Footnotes
1. Rollo, pp. 442-443; Decision, Secretary of Justice v. Hon. Ralph C. Lantion and Mark B.
Jimenez, G.R. No. 139465, January 18, 2000, pp. 39-40.
2. Rollo, p. 495; Urgent Motion for Reconsideration, p. 4.
3. "Prescribing the Procedure for the Extradition of Persons Who Have Committed Crimes in a
Foreign Country" signed into law on January 13, 1977.
4. Note, The United States v. The Libelants and Claimants of the Schooner Amistad , 10 L. Ed.
826 (1841), citing The Amiable Isabella, 6 Wheat. 1.
5. Article 31(1), Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties.
6. Glucksman v. Henkel , 221 U.S. 508, 511 (1911), citing Grin v. Shine , 187 US 181, 184, 47 L.
Ed. 130, 133, 23 S. Ct. Rep. 98, 12 Am. Crim. Rep. 366. See Pierce v. Creecy , 210 U.S. 387,
405, 52 L. Ed. 1113, 1122, 28 S. Ct. 714.
7. Kolovrat v. Oregon , 366 US 187, 192 (1961); Factor v. Laubenheimer , 290 U.S. 276, 295
(1933), citing Nielsen v. Johnson , 279 U.S. 52, 73 L. Ed. 610, 49 S. Ct. 223; Charlton v.
Kelly, 229 U.S. 447, 468, 57 L. Ed. 1274, 1283, 33 S. Ct. 945, 46 L.R.A. (N.S.) 397.
8. 210 SCRA 256, 261 (1992).
9. Rollo, p. 399.
10. See Original Records, pp. 467-482, Annex "B" of petitioner's Urgent Motion for
Reconsideration entitled "Observations of the United States In Support of the Urgent
Motion for Reconsideration by the Republic of the Philippines" signed by James K.
Robinson, Asst. Attorney General and Bruce C. Swartz, Deputy Asst. Attorney General,
Criminal Division, US Department of Justice and Sara Criscitelli, Asst. Director, O ce of
International Affairs, Criminal Division, Washington, D.C.
11. See Original Records, pp. 506-507, Note 327/00 dated March 10, 2000 from the Embassy of
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Canada.
12. See Original Records, p. 509, Note No. (34) in SBCR 1/27 16/80 Pt. 27 dated March 22,
2000 from the Security Bureau of the Hongkong SAR Government Secretariat.
13. Defensor-Santiago, Procedural Aspects of the Political Offence Doctrine, 51 Philippine Law
Journal 238, p. 258 (1976).
14. Elliot, No Due Process Right to a Speedy Extradition, Martin v. Warden, Atlanta Pen ., 993
F.2d 824 (11th Cir. 1993), 18 Suffolk Transnational Law Review 347, 353 (1995), citing
Jhirad v. Ferrandina, 536 F.2d 478, 482 (2d Cir.).
15. Wi eh l , Extradition Law at the Crossroads: The Trend Toward Extending Greater
Constitutional Procedural Protections To Fugitives Fighting Extradition from the United
States, 19 Michigan Journal of International Law 729, 741 (1998), citing United States v.
Galanis, 429 F. Supp. 1215 (D. Conn. 1977).
16. Section 9, P.D. No. 1069.
17. Ibid.
21. Note, Executive Discretion in Extradition, 62 Col. Law Rev., pp. 1314-1329.
22. Morrisey v. Brewer, 408 U.S. 471, 481 (1972), citing Cafeteria & Restaurant Workers Union v.
McElroy, 367 U.S. 886, 895 (1961), 6 L. Ed. 2d 1230, 1236, 81 S. Ct. 1743 (1961).
23. Morrisey v. Brewer, supra.
33. U.S. v. Curtiss-Wright Export Corp., 299 U.S. 304, 57 S. Ct. 216, 81 L. Ed. 255 (1936).
34. Morrisey v. Brewer , supra note 22, p. 481, citing Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee v.
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McGrath, 341 U.S. 123, 168, 95 L. Ed. 817, 852, 71 S. Ct. 624 (1951) (Frankfurter, J.,
Concurring), quoted in Goldberg v. Kelly , 397 U.S. 254, 263, 25 L. Ed. 2d 287, 296, 90 S.
Ct. 1011 (1970).
35. Section 2, Article II, 1987 Constitution.
YNARES-SANTIAGO, dissenting:
1. 31A Am Jur 2d Extradition § 19.
2. Hughes vs. Pflanz, 138 Fed 980.