People of the Philippines v. Panfilo Lacson, G.R. No. 149453, April 1, 2003
FACTS:
Before the Court is the petitioners’ Motion for
Reconsideration of the Resolution dated May 28, 2002, remanding this
case to the RTC of Quezon City, Branch 81, for the determination of several
factual issues relative to the application of Section 8 of Rule 117 of the
Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure on the dismissal of Criminal Cases Nos.
Q-99-81679 to Q-99-81689 filed against the respondent and his co-accused with
the said court. In the aforesaid criminal cases, the respondent and his
co-accused were charged with multiple murder for the shooting and killing of
eleven male persons bandied as members of the Kuratong Baleleng Gang. The
respondent opposed petitioners’ motion for reconsideration.
The Court ruled in the Resolution sought to be reconsidered
that the provisional dismissal of Criminal Cases Nos. Q-99-81679 to Q-99-81689
were with the express consent of the respondent as he himself moved for said
provisional dismissal when he filed his motion for judicial determination of
probable cause and for examination of witnesses. The Court also held therein
that although Section 8, Rule 117 of the Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure
could be given retroactive effect, there is still a need to determine whether
the requirements for its application are attendant. The trial court was thus
directed to resolve the following:
... (1) whether the
provisional dismissal of the cases had the express consent of the accused; (2)
whether it was ordered by the court after notice to the offended party; (3)
whether the 2-year period to revive it has already lapsed; (4) whether there is
any justification for the filing of the cases beyond the 2-year period; (5)
whether notices to the offended parties were given before the cases of
respondent Lacson were dismissed by then Judge Agnir; (6) whether there were
affidavits of desistance executed by the relatives of the three other victims;
(7) whether the multiple murder cases against respondent Lacson are being
revived within or beyond the 2-year bar.
The Court further held that the reckoning date of the
two-year bar had to be first determined whether it shall be from the date of
the order of then Judge Agnir, Jr. dismissing the cases, or from the dates of
receipt thereof by the various offended parties, or from the date of
effectivity of the new rule. According to the Court, if the cases were revived
only after the two-year bar, the State must be given the opportunity to justify
its failure to comply with the said time-bar. It emphasized that the new rule
fixes a time-bar to penalize the State for its inexcusable delay in prosecuting
cases already filed in court. However, the State is not precluded from
presenting compelling reasons to justify the revival of cases beyond the
two-year bar.
In support of their Motion for Reconsideration, the
petitioners contend that (a) Section 8, Rule 117 of the Revised Rules of
Criminal Procedure is not applicable to Criminal Cases Nos. Q-99-81679 to
Q-99-81689; and (b) the time-bar in said rule should not be applied
retroactively.
ISSUES:
1)
Whether Section 8, Rule 117 of the Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure is applicable
to Criminal Cases Nos. Q-99-81679 To Q-99-81689
2)
Whether the time-bar in Section 8, Rule 117 of the Revised Rules of Criminal
Procedure should not be applied retroactively
RULING:
1)
NO. Section 8, Rule 117 of the Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure reads:
Sec. 8. Provisional
dismissal. – A case shall not be provisionally dismissed except with the
express consent of the accused and with notice to the offended party.
The provisional
dismissal of offenses punishable by imprisonment not exceeding six (6) years or
a fine of any amount, or both, shall become permanent one (1) year after
issuance of the order without the case having been revived. With respect to
offenses punishable by imprisonment of more than six (6) years, their
provisional dismissal shall become permanent two (2) years after issuance of
the order without the case having been revived.
Having invoked said rule before the petitioners-panel of
prosecutors and before the Court of Appeals, the respondent is burdened to
establish the essential requisites of the first paragraph thereof, namely:
1. the prosecution
with the express conformity of the accused or the accused moves for a
provisional (sin perjuicio) dismissal of the case; or both the
prosecution and the accused move for a provisional dismissal of the case;
2. the offended
party is notified of the motion for a provisional dismissal of the case;
3. the court issues
an order granting the motion and dismissing the case provisionally;
4. the public
prosecutor is served with a copy of the order of provisional dismissal of the
case.
The foregoing requirements are conditions sine qua
non to the application of the time-bar in the second paragraph of the
new rule. The raison d’ etre for the requirement of the
express consent of the accused to a provisional dismissal of a criminal case is
to bar him from subsequently asserting that the revival of the criminal case
will place him in double jeopardy for the same offense or for an offense
necessarily included therein.
Although the second paragraph of the new rule states that
the order of dismissal shall become permanent one year after the issuance
thereof without the case having been revived, the provision should be construed
to mean that the order of dismissal shall become permanent one year after
service of the order of dismissal on the public prosecutor who has control of
the prosecution without the criminal case having been revived. The public
prosecutor cannot be expected to comply with the timeline unless he is served
with a copy of the order of dismissal.
Express consent to a provisional dismissal is given
either viva voce or in writing. It is a positive, direct,
unequivocal consent requiring no inference or implication to supply its
meaning. Where the accused writes on the motion of a prosecutor for a
provisional dismissal of the case No objection or With
my conformity, the writing amounts to express consent of the accused to a
provisional dismissal of the case. The mere inaction or silence of the
accused to a motion for a provisional dismissal of the case or his failure
to object to a provisional dismissal does not amount to express consent.
A motion of the accused for a provisional dismissal of a
case is an express consent to such provisional dismissal. If a criminal
case is provisionally dismissed with the express consent of the accused, the
case may be revived only within the periods provided in the new rule. On the
other hand, if a criminal case is provisionally dismissed without the express
consent of the accused or over his objection, the new rule would not apply. The
case may be revived or refiled even beyond the prescribed periods subject to
the right of the accused to oppose the same on the ground of double jeopardy or
that such revival or refiling is barred by the statute of limitations.
The case may be revived by the State within the time-bar
either by the refiling of the Information or by the filing of a new Information
for the same offense or an offense necessarily included therein. There would be
no need of a new preliminary investigation. However, in a case wherein
after the provisional dismissal of a criminal case, the original witnesses of
the prosecution or some of them may have recanted their testimonies or may have
died or may no longer be available and new witnesses for the State have
emerged, a new preliminary investigation must be conducted before an Information
is refiled or a new Information is filed. A new preliminary investigation is
also required if aside from the original accused, other persons are charged
under a new criminal complaint for the same offense or necessarily included
therein; or if under a new criminal complaint, the original charge has been
upgraded; or if under a new criminal complaint, the criminal liability of the
accused is upgraded from that as an accessory to that as a principal. The
accused must be accorded the right to submit counter-affidavits and evidence.
After all, "the fiscal is not called by the Rules of Court to wait in
ambush; the role of a fiscal is not mainly to prosecute but essentially to do
justice to every man and to assist the court in dispensing that justice."
In this case, the respondent has failed to prove that the
first and second requisites of the first paragraph of the new rule were present
when Judge Agnir, Jr. dismissed Criminal Cases Nos. Q-99-81679 to Q-99-81689.
Irrefragably, the prosecution did not file any motion for the provisional
dismissal of the said criminal cases. For his part, the respondent merely filed
a motion for judicial determination of probable cause and for examination of
prosecution witnesses alleging that under Article III, Section 2 of the
Constitution and the decision of this Court in Allado v. Diokno, among
other cases, there was a need for the trial court to conduct a personal
determination of probable cause for the issuance of a warrant of arrest against
respondent and to have the prosecution’s witnesses summoned before the court
for its examination. The respondent contended therein that until after the
trial court shall have personally determined the presence of probable cause, no
warrant of arrest should be issued against the respondent and if one had
already been issued, the warrant should be recalled by the trial court.
The Court also agrees with the petitioners’ contention that
no notice of any motion for the provisional dismissal of Criminal Cases Nos.
Q-99-81679 to Q-99-81689 or of the hearing thereon was served on the heirs of
the victims at least three days before said hearing as mandated by Rule 15,
Section 4 of the Rules of Court. It must be borne in mind that in crimes involving
private interests, the new rule requires that the offended party or parties or
the heirs of the victims must be given adequate a priori notice
of any motion for the provisional dismissal of the criminal case. Such notice
may be served on the offended party or the heirs of the victim through the
private prosecutor, if there is one, or through the public prosecutor who in
turn must relay the notice to the offended party or the heirs of the victim to
enable them to confer with him before the hearing or appear in court during the
hearing. The proof of such service must be shown during the hearing on the
motion, otherwise, the requirement of the new rule will become illusory. Such
notice will enable the offended party or the heirs of the victim the opportunity
to seasonably and effectively comment on or object to the motion on valid
grounds, including: (a) the collusion between the prosecution and the accused
for the provisional dismissal of a criminal case thereby depriving the State of
its right to due process; (b) attempts to make witnesses unavailable; or (c)
the provisional dismissal of the case with the consequent release of the
accused from detention would enable him to threaten and kill the offended party
or the other prosecution witnesses or flee from Philippine jurisdiction,
provide opportunity for the destruction or loss of the prosecution’s physical
and other evidence and prejudice the rights of the offended party to recover on
the civil liability of the accused by his concealment or furtive disposition of
his property or the consequent lifting of the writ of preliminary attachment
against his property.
In the case at bar, even if the respondent’s motion for a
determination of probable cause and examination of witnesses may be considered
for the nonce as his motion for a provisional dismissal of Criminal Cases Nos.
Q-99-81679 to Q-99-81689, however, the heirs of the victims were not notified
thereof prior to the hearing on said motion on March 22, 1999.
2) YES. The Court agrees with the petitioners that to apply
the time-bar retroactively so that the two-year period commenced to run on
March 31, 1999 when the public prosecutor received his copy of the resolution
of Judge Agnir, Jr. dismissing the criminal cases is inconsistent with the
intendment of the new rule. Instead of giving the State two years to revive
provisionally dismissed cases, the State had considerably less than two years
to do so. Thus, Judge Agnir, Jr. dismissed Criminal Cases Nos. Q-99-81679 to
Q-99-81689 on March 29, 1999. The new rule took effect on December 1, 2000. If
the Court applied the new time-bar retroactively, the State would have only one
year and three months or until March 31, 2001 within which to revive these
criminal cases. The period is short of the two-year period fixed under the new
rule. On the other hand, if the time limit is applied prospectively, the State
would have two years from December 1, 2000 or until December 1, 2002 within
which to revive the cases. This is in consonance with the intendment of the new
rule in fixing the time-bar and thus prevent injustice to the State and avoid
absurd, unreasonable, oppressive, injurious, and wrongful results in the
administration of justice.
The period from April 1, 1999 to November 30, 1999 should be
excluded in the computation of the two-year period because the rule prescribing
it was not yet in effect at the time and the State could not be expected to
comply with the time-bar. It cannot even be argued that the State waived its
right to revive the criminal cases against respondent or that it was negligent
for not reviving them within the two-year period under the new rule.
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