DIGEST - Kuroda v. Jalandoni

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SHIGENORI KURODA v.

Major General RAFAEL JALANDONI, Brigadier General • War is not ended simply because hostilities have ceased. After cessation of armed
CALIXTO DUQUE, Colonel MARGARITO TORALBA, Colonel IRENEO BUENCONSEJO, hostilities incident of war may remain pending which should be disposed of as in
Colonel PEDRO TABUENA, Major FEDERICO ARANAS, MELVILLE S. HUSSEY and time of war. An importance incident to a conduct of war is the adoption of measure
ROBERT PORT by the military command not only to repel and defeat the enemies but to seize and
G.R. No. L-2662 March 26, 1949 subject to disciplinary measure those enemies who in their attempt to thwart or
impede our military effort have violated the law of war. (Ex parte Quirin 317 U.S.,
FACTS 1; 63 Sup. Ct., 2.) Indeed the power to create a military commission for the trial
• Shigenori Kuroda, formerly a Lieutenant-General of the Japanese Imperial Army and and punishment of war criminals is an aspect of waging war.
Commanding General of the Japanese Imperial Forces in The Philippines during a • Consequently, the President as Commander in Chief is fully empowered to
period covering 1943 and 1944 is charged before a military Commission convened consummate this unfinished aspect of war namely the trial and punishment of war
by the Chief of Staff of the Armed forces of the Philippines with having unlawfully criminal through the issuance and enforcement of Executive Order No. 68.
disregarded and failed "to discharge his duties as such command, permitting them
to commit brutal atrocities and other high crimes against noncombatant civilians
• Petitioner argues that respondent Military Commission has no Jurisdiction to try
petitioner for acts committed in violation of the Hague Convention and the Geneva
and prisoners of the Imperial Japanese Forces in violation of the laws and customs
Convention because the Philippines is not a signatory to the first and signed the
of war".
second only in 1947. It cannot be denied that the rules and regulation of the Hague
• Kuroda seeks to establish the illegality of Executive Order No. 68 prescribing rule and Geneva conventions form, part of and are wholly based on the generally
and regulation governing the trial of accused war criminals since Philippines is not a accepted principals of international law. In facts these rules and principles were
signatory nor an adherent to the Hague Convention on Rules and Regulations accepted by the two belligerent nation the United State and Japan who were
covering Land Warfare and therefore the charged of 'crimes' is not based on law, signatories to the two Convention. Such rule and principles therefore form part of
national and international: to enjoin and prohibit respondents Melville S. Hussey the law of our nation even if the Philippines was not a signatory to the conventions
and Robert Port from participating in the prosecution of petitioner's case before the embodying them for our Constitution has been deliberately general and extensive in
Military Commission since they are not authorized by the Supreme Court to practice its scope and is not confined to the recognition of rule and principle of international
law in the Philippines is a diminution of our personality as an independent state and law as continued inn treaties to which our government may have been or shall be a
their appointment as prosecutor are a violation of our Constitution for the reason signatory.
that they are not qualified to practice law in the Philippines.
• Furthermore when the crimes charged against petitioner were allegedly committed
the Philippines was under the sovereignty of United States and thus we were equally
ISSUE
bound together with the United States and with Japan to the right and obligation
WON EO 68 is valid
contained in the treaties between the belligerent countries. These rights and
obligation were not erased by our assumption of full sovereignty.
HELD
• EO 68 is valid and constitutional. Article 2 of our Constitution provides in its section
• Petitioner challenges the participation of two American attorneys on the ground that
said attorney's are not qualified to practice law in Philippines in accordance with our
3, that — The Philippines renounces war as an instrument of national policy and
Rules of court and the appointment of said attorneys as prosecutors is violative of
adopts the generally accepted principles of international law as part of the of the
our national sovereignty. Military Commission is a special military tribunal governed
nation.
by a special law and not by the Rules of court which govern ordinary civil court. It
• In accordance with the generally accepted principle of international law of the has already been shown that Executive Order No. 68 which provides for the
present day including the Hague Convention the Geneva Convention and significant organization of such military commission is a valid and constitutional law. There is
precedents of international jurisprudence established by the United Nation all those nothing in said executive order which requires that counsel appearing before said
person military or civilian who have been guilty of planning preparing or waging a commission must be attorneys qualified to practice law in the Philippines in
war of aggression and of the commission of crimes and offenses consequential and accordance with the Rules of Court. In fact it is common in military tribunals that
incidental thereto in violation of the laws and customs of war, of humanity and counsel for the parties are usually military personnel who are neither attorneys nor
civilization are held accountable therefor. Consequently in the promulgation and even possessed of legal training.
enforcement of Execution Order No. 68 the President of the Philippines has acted in
conformity with the generally accepted and policies of international law which are
part of the our Constitution. The promulgation of said executive order is an exercise
by the President of his power as Commander in chief of all our armed forces

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