Plaintiff-Appellee Accused-Appellant The Solicitor General Cecilia S. Rivera
Plaintiff-Appellee Accused-Appellant The Solicitor General Cecilia S. Rivera
Plaintiff-Appellee Accused-Appellant The Solicitor General Cecilia S. Rivera
SYLLABUS
DECISION
FRANCISCO, J : p
The trial court nonetheless found that her defenses could not offset the
positive testimony of Pat. Godoy that his unit received information concerning
accused-appellant's drug pushing activities from a confidential informant, that
they verified the information by surveillance and that the buy-bust operation
was conducted strictly as planned and as described in the arrest report and
joint affidavit of apprehension. Thus, her conviction.
Now before us on appeal, appellant raises a single error in her
"Appellant's Brief", namely: that the trial court erred in admitting the decks of
shabu in evidence against her because they were obtained through a
warrantless arrest and search. 2 It appears from her "Reply Brief with Motion To
Dismiss", however, that appellant likewise assails the jurisdiction of the trial
court (RTC) over the case. 3 Thus, two issues are up for resolution.
And so she posits that there being no valid warrantless arrest, the search
incidental thereto which yielded several decks of "shabu" is, perforce, illegal.
cdta
. . . (Emphasis supplied.)
In the "Simon" case, 17 the Court has had the occasion to rule that the
abovementioned beneficent provisions can be applied retroactively to
judgments which may have become final and executory prior to December 31,
1993 and even to those who are already serving their sentence. This doctrine
was reiterated in "People v. Martinez " 18 where the Court held that the penalty
o f reclusion perpetua to death and a fine as a conjunctive penalty shall be
imposed only when the shabu involved is 200 grams or more, otherwise if the
quantity involved is less than the foregoing, the penalty shall range from prision
correccional to reclusion temporal minus the fine. 19
". . . the component penalties of prision correccional, prision
mayor and reclusion temporal shall each be 'considered as a principal
imposable penalty . . . of the total complex penalty . . . to be imposed
separately as determined by the quantity of the drug involved . . .' and
that the modifying circumstances shall be 'used to fix the proper period
of that component penalty.' Thus, the Court directed that the
quantities (of the different drugs) enumerated in Sec. 20 of R.A. No.
6425, as amended, be 'divided into three, with the resulting quotient,
and double or treble the same, to be respectively used as bases for
allocating the penalty proportionately among the three . . . periods
according to the severity thereof.' cdtai
Separate Opinions
DAVIDE, JR., J., concurring:
I fully concur with the ponencia of Mr. Justice Ricardo J. Francisco. I hasten
to add, however, that all drug-related cases, regardless of the quantity involved
and the penalty imposable pursuant to R.A. No. 7659, as applied/interpreted in
People vs. Simon (G.R. No. 93028, 29 July 1994; 234 SCRA 555) and of the
provisions of R.A. No. 7691 expanding the jurisdiction of the Metropolitan Trial
Courts and Municipal Circuit Trial Courts, still fall within the exclusive original
jurisdiction of Regional Trial Courts, in view of Section 39 of R.A. No. 6425 (the
Dangerous Drugs Act of 1972). R.A. No. 7659 and R.A. No. 7691 have neither
amended nor modified this Section. cdtai
Footnotes
15. REPUBLIC ACT NO. 7659: AN ACT TO IMPOSE THE DEATH PENALTY ON
CERTAIN HEINOUS CRIMES, AMENDING FOR THAT PURPOSE THE REVISED
PENAL CODE, AS AMENDED, OTHER SPECIAL LAWS, AND FOR OTHER
PURPOSES.
16. To correct the overlapping error which consists in the imposition of
reclusion perpetua both as the maximum of the penalty where the amount of
drugs involved is less than the quantities specified and as the minimum
where the quantity involved is equal to or more than the amount specified,
the Court in People v. Simon categorically stated:
". . . we hereby hold that the penalty to be imposed where the quantity of the
drugs involved is less than the quantities stated in the first paragraph shall
range from prision correccional to reclusion temporal, and not reclusion
perpetua". cdta
17. Supra.
18. 236 SCRA 13.
19. Id.
20. Id., at pp. 20-21. cdasia
21. Supra.
22. SECTION 2. Section 32 of the same law (B.P. 129) is hereby amended to
read as follows:
"Sec. 32. Jurisdiction of Metropolitan Trial Courts, Municipal Trial Courts, and
Municipal Circuit Trial Courts in Criminal Case. — Except in cases falling
within the exclusive original jurisdiction of Regional Trial Courts and of the
Sandiganbayan, the Metropolitan Trial Courts, Municipal Trial Courts, and
Municipal Circuit Trial Courts shall exercise: cdasia
25. SECTION 7. The provisions of this Act shall apply to all civil cases that have
not yet reached the pre-trial stage. However, by agreement of other parties,
civil cases cognizable by the Municipal and Metropolitan Courts by the
provisions of this Act may be transferred to the Regional Trial Courts to the
latter. The Executive Judge of the appropriate Regional Trial Court shall
define the administrative procedure of transferring the cases affected by the
redefinition of jurisdiction of the Metropolitan Trial Courts, Municipal Trial
Courts and Municipal Circuit Trial Courts.
26. Uncontroverted is appellant's declaration in her Urgent Ex-Parte Motion to
File Brief that she had been in jail for more than three years as of July 14,
1994.
27. People v. Rita Labriaga, et al., G.R. No. 92418, November 20, 1995; Angeles
v. Director of New Bilibid Prison, G.R. No. 117568, January 4, 1995.