G.R. No. 93335
September 13, 1990
JUAN PONCE
ENRILE, petitioner,
vs.
HON. OMAR U. AMIN, Presiding Judge of RTCof Makati, Branch 135, HON. IGNACIO M. CAPULONG, Presiding Judge of RTCof Makati, Branch 134, Pairing Judge, SPECIAL COMPOSITE TEAM of: Senior State Prosecutor AURELIO TRAMPE, State Prosecutor FERDINAND ABESAMIS and Asst. City Prosecutor EULOGIO MANANQUIL; and PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, respondents.
vs.
HON. OMAR U. AMIN, Presiding Judge of RTCof Makati, Branch 135, HON. IGNACIO M. CAPULONG, Presiding Judge of RTCof Makati, Branch 134, Pairing Judge, SPECIAL COMPOSITE TEAM of: Senior State Prosecutor AURELIO TRAMPE, State Prosecutor FERDINAND ABESAMIS and Asst. City Prosecutor EULOGIO MANANQUIL; and PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, respondents.
Senator Juan Ponce
Enrile was charaged with rebellion complexed with murder 1 with the RTCof Quezon City,
government prosecutors filed another information charging him for violation of
Presidential Decree No. 1829 with the RTC of Makati.
On March 2, 1990,
the petitioner filed an Omnibus Motion (a) to hold in abeyance the issuance of
a warrant of arrest pending personal determination by the court of probable
cause, and (b) to dismiss the case and expunge the information from the record.
On March 16, 1990,
respondent Judge Ignacio Capulong, as pairing judge of respondent Judge Omar
Amin, denied Senator Enrile's Omnibus motion on the basis of a finding that
"there (was) probable cause to hold the accused Juan Ponce Enrile liable
for violation of PD No. 1829."
The petitioner filed a Motion for Reconsideration and to Quash/Dismiss the
Information on the grounds that:
(a) The facts
charged do not constitute an offense;
(b) The respondent
court's finding of probable cause was devoid of factual and legal basis; and
(c) The pending
charge of rebellion complexed with murder and frustrated murder against Senator
Enrile as alleged co-conspirator of Col. Honasan, on the basis of their alleged
meeting on December 1, 1989 preclude the prosecution of the Senator for
harboring or concealing the Colonel on the same occasion under PD 1829.
The trial court issued an order denying the MFR for
alleged lack of merit and setting Senator Enrile's arraignment.
The petitioner
comes to this Court on certiorari imputing grave abuse of discretion amounting
to lack or excess of jurisdiction committed by the respondent court in refusing
to quash/ dismiss the information on the following grounds, to wit:
I. The facts charged do not constitute an offense;
II. The alleged harboring or concealing by Sen. Enrile of Col.
Honasan in a supposed meeting on 1 December 1989 is absorbed in, or is a
component element of, the "complexed" rebellion presently charged
against Sen. Enrile as alleged co-conspirator of Col. Honasan on the basis of
the same meeting on 1 December 1989;
III. The orderly administration of Justice requires that there be
only one prosecution for all the component acts of rebellion;
IV. There is no probable cause to hold Sen. Enrile for trial for
alleged violation of Presidential Decree No. 1829;
V. No preliminary investigation was conducted for alleged violation
of Presidential Decree No. 1829. The preliminary investigation, held only for
rebellion, was marred by patent irregularities resulting in denial of due
process.
On May 20, 1990 we
issued aTRO enjoining the respondents from conducting
further proceedings in Criminal Case No. 90-777 until otherwise directed by
this Court.
ISSUE:Whether or not the petitioner could be separately charged for
violation of PD No. 1829 notwithstanding the rebellion case earlier filed
against Sneator Juan Ponce Enrile.
Respondent Judge
Amin sustained the charge of violation of PD No. 1829 notwithstanding the
rebellion case filed against the petitioner on the theory that the former
involves a special law while the latter is based on the Revised Penal Code or a
general law.
The resolution of
the above issue brings us anew to the case of People v. Hernandez (99
Phil. 515 [1956]) the rulings of which were recently repeated in the petition
for habeas corpus of Juan Ponce Enrile v. Judge Salazar, (G.R. Nos.
92163 and 92164, June 5, 1990). The Enrile case gave this Court the
occasion to reiterate the long standing proscription against splitting the
component offenses of rebellion and subjecting them to separate prosecutions, a
procedure reprobated in the Hernandez case. This Court recently
declared:
The rejection of both options shapes and determines the primary
ruling of the Court, which that Hernandez remains binding doctrine
operating to prohibit the complexing of rebellion with any other offense
committed on the occasion thereof, either as a means to its commission or as an
unintended effect of an activity that commutes rebellion. (Emphasis
supplied)
ISSUE 2: Whether or
not the above doctrine is applicable in the case at bar?
HELD: If a person
can not be charged with the complex crime of rebellion for the greater penalty
to be applied, neither can he be charged separately for two (2) different
offenses where one is a constitutive or component element or committed in
furtherance of rebellion.
The petitioner is
presently charged with having violated PD No. 1829 particularly Section 1 (c)
which states:
SECTION 1. The penalty of prison correccional in its maximum
period, or a fine ranging from 1,000 to 6,000 pesos or both, shall be imposed
upon any person who knowingly or wilfully obstructs, impedes, frustrates or
delays the apprehension of suspects and the investigation and prosecution of
criminal cases by committing any of the following acts:
xxx xxx xxx
(c) harboring or concealing, or facilitating the escape of, any
person he knows, or has reasonable ground to believe or suspect has committed
any offense under existing penal laws in order to prevent his arrest,
prosecution and conviction.
xxx xxx xxx
The prosecution in
this Makati case alleges that the petitioner entertained and accommodated Col.
Honasan by giving him food and comfort on December 1, 1989 in his house.
Knowing that Colonel Honasan is a fugitive from justice, Sen. Enrile allegedly
did not do anything to have Honasan arrested or apprehended. And because of
such failure the petitioner prevented Col. Honasan's arrest and conviction in
violation of Section 1 (c) of PD No. 1829.
The rebellion
charges filed against the petitioner in Quezon City were based on the
affidavits executed by three (3) employees of the Silahis International Hotel
who stated that the fugitive Col. Gregorio "Gringo" Honasan and some
100 rebel soldiers attended the mass and birthday party held at the residence
of the petitioner in the evening of December 1, 1989. The information (Annex
"C", p. 3) particularly reads that on "or about 6:30 p.m., 1
December, 1989, Col. Gregorio "Gringo" Honasan conferred with accused
Senator Juan Ponce Enrile accompanied by about 100 fully armed rebel soldiers
wearing white armed patches". The prosecution thereby concluded that:
In such a situation, Sen. Enrile's talking with rebel leader Col.
Gregorio "Gringo" Honasan in his house in the presence of about 100
uniformed soldiers who were fully armed, can be inferred that they were
co-conspirators in the failed December coup. (Annex A, Rollo, p. 65;
Emphasis supplied)
As can be readily
seen, the factual allegations supporting the rebellion charge constitute or
include the very incident which gave rise to the charge of the violation under
Presidential Decree No. 1829. Under the Department of Justice resolution (Annex
A, Rollo, p. 49) there is only one crime of rebellion complexed with murder and
multiple frustrated murder but there could be 101 separate and independent
prosecutions for harboring and concealing" Honasan and 100 other armed
rebels under PD No. 1829. The splitting of component elements is readily
apparent.
The petitioner is
now facing charges of rebellion in conspiracy with the fugitive Col. Gringo
Honasan. Necessarily, being in conspiracy with Honasan, petitioners alleged act
of harboring or concealing was for no other purpose but in furtherance of the
crime of rebellion thus constitute a component thereof. it was motivated by the
single intent or resolution to commit the crime of rebellion. As held in People
v. Hernandez, supra:
In short, political crimes are those directly aimed against the
political order, as well as such common crimes as may be committed to achieve a
political purpose. The decisive factor is the intent or motive. (p. 536)
The crime of
rebellion consists of many acts. It is described as a vast movement of men and
a complex net of intrigues and plots. (People v. Almasan [CA] O.G. 1932).
Jurisprudence tells us that acts committed in furtherance of the rebellion though
crimes in themselves are deemed absorbed in the one single crime of rebellion.
(People v. Geronimo, 100 Phil. 90 [1956]; People v. Santos, 104 Phil. 551
[1958]; People v. Rodriguez, 107 Phil. 659 [1960]; People v. Lava, 28 SCRA 72
[1969]). In this case, the act of harboring or concealing Col. Honasan is
clearly a mere component or ingredient of rebellion or an act done in
furtherance of the rebellion. It cannot therefore be made the basis of a
separate charge. The case of People v. Prieto 2 (80 Phil., 138 [1948]) is
instructive:
In the nature of things, the giving of aid and comfort can only be
accomplished by some kind of action. Its very nature partakes of a deed or
physical activity as opposed to a mental operation. (Cramer v. U.S., ante) This
deed or physical activity may be, and often is, in itself a criminal offense
under another penal statute or provision. Even so, when the deed is charged as
an element of treason it becomes Identified with the latter crime and can not
be the subject of a separate punishment, or used in combination with treason to
increase the penalty as article 48 of the Revised Penal Code provides. Just as
one can not be punished for possessing opium in a prosecution for smoking the
Identical drug, and a robber cannot be held guilty of coercion or trespass to a
dwelling in a prosecution for robbery, because possession of opium and force
and trespass are inherent in smoking and in robbery respectively, so may not a
defendant be made liable for murder as a separate crime or in conjunction with
another offense where, as in this case, it is averred as a constitutive
ingredient of treason.
The prosecution
tries to distinguish by contending that harboring or concealing a fugitive is
punishable under a special law while the rebellion case is based on the Revised
Penal Code; hence, prosecution under one law will not bar a prosecution under
the other. This argument is specious in rebellion cases.
In the light of
the Hernandez doctrine the prosecution's theory must fail. The rationale
remains the same. All crimes, whether punishable under a special law or general
law, which are mere components or ingredients, or committed in furtherance
thereof, become absorbed in the crime of rebellion and can not be isolated and
charged as separate crimes in themselves. Thus:
This does not detract, however, from the rule that the ingredients
of a crime form part and parcel thereof, and hence, are absorbed by the same
and cannot be punished either separately therefrom or by the application of
Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code. ... (People v. Hernandez, supra,
at p. 528)
The Hernandez
and other related cases mention common crimes as absorbed in the crime of
rebellion. These common crimes refer to all acts of violence such as murder,
arson, robbery, kidnapping etc. as provided in the Revised Penal Code. The
attendant circumstances in the instant case, however, constrain us to rule that
the theory of absorption in rebellion cases must not confine itself to common
crimes but also to offenses under special laws which are perpetrated in
furtherance of the political offense.
The conversation
and, therefore, alleged conspiring of Senator Ponce Enrile with Colonel Honasan
is too intimately tied up with his allegedly harboring and concealing Honasan
for practically the same act to form two separate crimes of rebellion and
violation of PD No. 1829.
Clearly, the
petitioner's alleged act of harboring or concealing which was based on his acts
of conspiring with Honasan was committed in connection with or in furtherance
of rebellion and must now be deemed as absorbed by, merged in, and Identified
with the crime of rebellion punished in Articles 134 and 135 of the RPC.
Thus, national, as well as international, laws and jurisprudence
overwhelmingly favor the proposition that common crimes, perpetrated in
furtherance of a political offense, are divested of their character as
"common" offenses, and assume the political complexion of the main
crime of which they are mere ingredients, and consequently, cannot be
punished separately from the principal offense, or complexed with the same, to
justify the imposition of a graver penalty. (People v. Hernandez, supra,
p. 541)
In People v.
Elias Rodriguez, 107 Phil. 659 [1960], the accused, after having pleaded
guilty and convicted of the crime of rebellion, faced an independent
prosecution for illegal possession of firearms. The Court ruled:
An examination of the record, however, discloses that the crime
with which the accused is charged in the present case which is that of illegal
possession of firearm and ammunition is already absorbed as a necessary element
or ingredient in the crime of rebellion with which the same accused is charged
with other persons in a separate case and wherein he pleaded guilty and was
convicted. (at page 662)
xxx xxx xxx
[T]he conclusion is inescapable that the crime with which the
accused is charged in the present case is already absorbed in the rebellion
case and so to press it further now would be to place him in double jeopardy.
(at page 663)
Noteworthy is the
recent case of Misolas v. Panga, (G.R. No. 83341, January 30, 1990)
where the Court had the occasion to pass upon a nearly similar issue. In this
case, the petitioner Misolas, an alleged member of the New Peoples Army (NPA),
was charged with illegal possession of firearms and ammunitions in furtherance
of subversion under Section 1 of PD 1866. In his motion to quash the
information, the petitioner based his arguments on the Hernandez and Geronimo
rulings on the doctrine of absorption of common in rebellion. The Court,
however, clarified, to wit:
... in the present case, petitioner is being charged specifically
for the qualified offense of illegal possession of firearms and ammunition
under PD 1866. HE IS NOT BEING CHARGED WITH THE COMPLEX CRIME OF SUBVERSION
WITH ILLEGAL POSSESSION OF FIREARMS. NEITHER IS HE BEING SEPARATELY CHARGED FOR
SUBVERSION AND FOR ILLEGAL POSSESSION OF FIREARMS. Thus, the rulings of the
Court in Hernandez, Geronimo and Rodriguez find no application in this
case.
In the
above case upheld the prosecution for illegal possession of firearms under PD
1866 because no separate prosecution for subversion or rebellion had been
filed. 3 The prosecution must make up its mind whether to charge Senator
Ponce Enrile with rebellion alone or to drop the rebellion case and charge him
with murder and multiple frustrated murder and also violation of P.D. 1829. It
cannot complex the rebellion with murder and multiple frustrated murder.
Neither can it prosecute him for rebellion in Quezon City and violation of PD
1829 in Makati. It should be noted that there is in fact a separate prosecution
for rebellion already filed with the RTCof Quezon City.
HELD: In such a case, the
independent prosecution under PD 1829 can not prosper.
The intent or motive is a decisive factor. If Senator Ponce Enrile
is not charged with rebellion and he harbored or concealed Colonel Honasan
simply because the latter is a friend and former associate, the motive for the
act is completely different. But if the act is committed with political or
social motives, that is in furtherance of rebellion, then it should be deemed
to form part of the crime of rebellion instead of being punished separately.In view of the
foregoing, the petitioner can not be tried separately under PD 1829 in addition
to his being prosecuted in the rebellion case. With this ruling, there is no
need for the Court to pass upon the other issues raised by the petitioner.
The petition was
granted . The Information in Criminal Case No. 90-777 is QUASHED. The writ of
preliminary injunction, enjoining respondent Judges and their successors in
Criminal Case No. 90-777, RTCof Makati, from holding the arraignment of Sen.
Juan Ponce Enrile and from conducting further proceedings therein is made
permanent.
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