1) G.R. No. 128587
1) G.R. No. 128587
128587
Constitution Statutes Executive Issuances Judicial Issuances Other Issuances Jurisprudence International Legal Resources AUSL Exclusive
FIRST DIVISION
DECISION
GARCIA, J.:
On pure questions of law, petitioner People of the Philippines has directly come to this Court via this petition for
review on certiorari to nullify and set aside the Resolution1 dated 13 March 1997 of the Regional Trial Court of
Manila, Branch 18, in Criminal Case Nos. 96-149990 to 96-149992, entitled People of the Philippines v. Lawrence
Wang y Chen, granting private respondent Lawrence C. Wang’s Demurrer to Evidence and acquitting him of the
three (3) charges filed against him, namely: (1) Criminal Case No. 96-149990 for Violation of Section 16, Article III in
relation to Section 2(e)(2), Article I of Republic Act (R.A.) No. 6425 (Dangerous Drugs Act); (2) Criminal Case No.
96-149991 for Violation of Presidential Decree No. 1866 (Illegal Possession of Firearms); and (3) Criminal Case No.
96-149992 for Violation of Comelec Resolution No. 2828 in relation to R.A. No. 7166 (COMELEC Gun Ban).
The three (3) separate Informations filed against Lawrence C. Wang in the court of origin respectively read:
That on or about the 17th day of May 1996, in the City of Manila, Philippines, the said accused did then and there
willfully, unlawfully and knowingly have in his possession and under his custody and control a bulk of white and
yellowish crystalline substance known as SHABU contained in thirty-two (32) transparent plastic bags weighing
approximately 29.2941 kilograms, containing methamphetamine hydrochloride, a regulated drug, without the
corresponding license or prescription therefor.
Contrary to law.2
That on or about the 17th day of May 1996, in the City of Manila, Philippines, the said accused did then and there
willfully, unlawfully and knowingly have in his possession and under his custody and control one (1) DAEWOO Cal.
9mm, automatic pistol with one loaded magazine and one AMT Cal. .380 9mm automatic backup pistol with
magazine loaded with ammunitions without first having secured the necessary license or permit therefor from the
proper authorities.
Contrary to law. 3
That on or about the 17th day of May 1996, in the City of Manila, Philippines, the said accused did then and there
willfully, unlawfully and knowingly have in his possession and under his custody and control one (1) DAEWOO Cal.
9mm automatic pistol with one loaded magazine and one (1) AMT Cal. 380 9mm automatic backup pistol with
magazine loaded with ammunitions, carrying the same along Maria Orosa St., Ermita, Manila, which is a public
place, on the date which is covered by an election period, without first securing the written permission or authority
from the Commission on Elections, as provided by the COMELEC Resolution 2828 in relation to Republic Act 7166.
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Contrary to law. 4
During his arraignment, accused Wang refused to enter a plea to all the Informations and instead interposed a
continuing objection to the admissibility of the evidence obtained by the police operatives. Thus, the trial court
ordered that a plea of "Not Guilty" be entered for him.5 Thereafter, joint trial of the three (3) consolidated cases
followed.
On 16 May 1996, at about 7:00 p.m., police operatives of the Public Assistance and Reaction Against Crime of the
Department of Interior and Local Government, namely, Captain Margallo, Police Inspector Cielito Coronel and SPO3
Reynaldo Cristobal, arrested SPO2 Vergel de Dios, Rogelio Anoble and a certain Arellano, for unlawful possession
of methamphetamine hydrochloride, a regulated drug popularly known as shabu. In the course of the investigation of
the three arrested persons, Redentor Teck, alias Frank, and Joseph Junio were identified as the source of the drug.
An entrapment operation was then set after the three were prevailed upon to call their source and pretend to order
another supply of shabu.
At around 11:00 p.m. that same date, Redentor Teck and Joseph Junio were arrested while they were about to hand
over another bag of shabu to SPO2 De Dios and company. Questioned, Redentor Teck and Joseph Junio informed
the police operatives that they were working as talent manager and gymnast instructor, respectively, of Glamour
Modeling Agency owned by Lawrence Wang. Redentor Teck and Joseph Junio did not disclose their source of
shabu but admitted that they were working for Wang.6 They also disclosed that they knew of a scheduled delivery of
shabu early the following morning of 17 May 1996, and that their employer (Wang) could be found at the Maria
Orosa Apartment in Malate, Manila. The police operatives decided to look for Wang to shed light on the illegal drug
activities of Redentor Teck and Joseph Junio. Police Inspector Cielito Coronel and his men then proceeded to Maria
Orosa Apartment and placed the same under surveillance.
Prosecution witness Police Inspector Cielito Coronel testified that at about 2:10 a.m. of 17 May 1996, Wang, who
was described to the operatives by Teck, came out of the apartment and walked towards a parked BMW car. On
nearing the car, he (witness) together with Captain Margallo and two other police officers approached Wang,
introduced themselves to him as police officers, asked his name and, upon hearing that he was Lawrence Wang,
immediately frisked him and asked him to open the back compartment of the BMW car.7 When frisked, there was
found inside the front right pocket of Wang and confiscated from him an unlicensed AMT Cal. 380 9mm automatic
Back-up Pistol loaded with ammunitions. At the same time, the other members of the operatives searched the BMW
car and found inside it were the following items: (a) 32 transparent plastic bags containing white crystalline
substance with a total weight of 29.2941 kilograms, which substance was later analyzed as positive for
methamphetamine hydrochloride, a regulated drug locally known as shabu; (b) cash in the amount of ₱650,000.00;
(c) one electronic and one mechanical scales; and (d) an unlicensed Daewoo 9mm Pistol with magazine. Then and
there, Wang resisted the warrantless arrest and search.8
On 6 December 1996, the prosecution rested its case and upon motion, accused Wang was granted 25 days from
said date within which to file his intended Demurrer to Evidence.9 On 19 December 1996, the prosecution filed a
Manifestation10 to the effect that it had rested its case only in so far as the charge for Violation of the Dangerous
Drugs Act in Criminal Case No. 96-149990 is concerned, and not as regards the two cases for Illegal Possession of
Firearms (Crim. Case No. 96-149991) and Violation of the Comelec Gun Ban (Crim. Case No. 96-149992).
Accordingly, trial continued.
On 9 January 1997, Wang filed his undated Demurrer to Evidence,11 praying for his acquittal and the dismissal of
the three (3) cases against him for lack of a valid arrest and search warrants and the inadmissibility of the
prosecution’s evidence against him. Considering that the prosecution has not yet filed its Opposition to the
demurrer, Wang filed an Amplification12 to his Demurrer of Evidence on 20 January 1997. On 12 February 1997, the
prosecution filed its Opposition13 alleging that the warrantless search was legal as an incident to the lawful arrest
and that it has proven its case, so it is now time for the defense to present its evidence.
On 13 March 1997, the respondent judge, the Hon. Perfecto A.S. Laguio, Jr., issued the herein assailed
Resolution14 granting Wang’s Demurrer to Evidence and acquitting him of all charges for lack of evidence, thus:
WHEREFORE, the accused's undated Demurrer to Evidence is hereby granted; the accused is acquitted of the
charges against him for the crimes of Violation of Section 16, Article III of the Dangerous Drugs Act, Illegal
Possession of Firearms, and Violation of Comelec Gun Ban, for lack of evidence; the 32 bags of shabu with a total
weight of 29.2941 kilograms and the two unlicensed pistols, one AMT Cal. .380 9mm and one Daewoo Cal. 9mm.
are ordered confiscated in favor of the government and the branch clerk is directed to turn over the 32 bags of
shabu to the Dangerous Drugs Board in Intramuros, Manila, and the two firearms to the Firearms and Explosive
Units, PNP, Camp Crame, Quezon City, for proper disposition, and the officer-in-charge of PARAC, Department of
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Interior and Local Government, is ordered to return the confiscated amount of P650,000.00 to the accused, and the
confiscated BMW car to its registered owner, David Lee. No costs.
SO ORDERED.
Hence, this petition15 for review on certiorari by the People, submitting that the trial court erred -
XXX IN HOLDING THAT THE UNDISPUTED FACTS AND CIRCUMSTANCES DID NOT
CONSTITUTE PROBABLE CAUSE WITHIN THE CONTEMPLATION OF SECTION 2, ARTICLE III OF
THE CONSTITUTION, AND IN HOLDING THAT SUCH FACTS AND CIRCUMSTANCES NEITHER
JUSTIFIED THE WARRANTLESS SEARCH OF ACCUSED'S VEHICLE AND THE SEIZURE OF THE
CONTRABAND THEREIN.
ll
lII
XXX IN DECLARING THE WARRANTLESS ARREST OF THE ACCUSED AND THE SEARCH AND
SEIZURE OF HIS HANDGUNS UNLAWFUL.
IV
XXX IN NOT ADMITTING IN EVIDENCE THE EVIDENCE SEIZED AND OFFERED BY THE
PROSECUTION AND IN NOT DENYING ACCUSED'S DEMURRER TO EVIDENCE.
In its Resolution16 of 9 July 1997, the Court, without giving due course to the petition, required the public and private
respondents to comment thereon within ten days from notice. Private respondent Wang filed his comment17on 18
August 1997.
On 10 September 1997, the Court required the People to file a reply,18 which the Office of the Solicitor General did
on 5 December 1997, after several extensions.19
On 20 October 2004, the Court resolved to give due course to the petition and required the parties to submit their
respective memoranda,20 which they did.
The case presents two main issues: (a) whether the prosecution may appeal the trial court’s resolution granting
Wang’s demurrer to evidence and acquitting him of all the charges against him without violating the constitutional
proscription against double jeopardy; and (b) whether there was lawful arrest, search and seizure by the police
operatives in this case despite the absence of a warrant of arrest and/or a search warrant.
First off, it must be emphasized that the present case is an appeal filed directly with this Court via a petition for
review on certiorari under Rule 45 in relation to Rule 41, Section 2, paragraph (c) of the Rules of Court raising only
pure questions of law, ordinary appeal by mere filing of a notice of appeal not being allowed as a mode of appeal
directly to this Court. Then, too, it bears stressing that the right to appeal is neither a natural right nor a part of due
process, it being merely a statutory privilege which may be exercised only in the manner provided for by law
(Velasco v. Court of Appeals21). Although Section 2, Rule 122 of the Rules on Criminal Procedure states that any
party may appeal, the right of the People to appeal is, in the very same provision, expressly made subject to the
prohibition against putting the accused in double jeopardy. It also basic that appeal in criminal cases throws the
whole records of the case wide open for review by the appellate court, that is why any appeal from a judgment of
acquittal necessarily puts the accused in double jeopardy. In effect, the very same Section 2 of Rule 122 of the
Rules on Criminal Procedure, disallows appeal by the People from judgments of acquittal.
An order granting an accused’s demurrer to evidence is a resolution of the case on the merits, and it amounts to an
acquittal. Generally, any further prosecution of the accused after an acquittal would violate the constitutional
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proscription on double jeopardy. To this general rule, however, the Court has previously made some exceptions.
The celebrated case of Galman v. Sandiganbayan22 presents one exception to the rule on double jeopardy, which
is, when the prosecution is denied due process of law:
No court whose Presiding Justice has received "orders or suggestions" from the very President who by an
amendatory decree (disclosed only at the hearing of oral arguments on November 8, 1984 on a petition challenging
the referral of the Aquino-Galman murder cases to the Tanodbayan and Sandiganbayan instead of to a court martial,
as mandatorily required by the known P.D. 1850 at the time providing for exclusive jurisdiction of courts martial over
criminal offenses committed by military men) made it possible to refer the cases to the Sandiganbayan, can be an
impartial court, which is the very essence of due process of law. As the writer then wrote, "jurisdiction over cases
should be determined by law, and not by preselection of the Executive, which could be much too easily transformed
into a means of predetermining the outcome of individual cases." This criminal collusion as to the handling and
treatment of the cases by public respondents at the secret Malacañang conference (and revealed only after fifteen
months by Justice Manuel Herrera) completely disqualified respondent Sandiganbayan and voided ab initio its
verdict. This renders moot and irrelevant for now the extensive arguments of respondents accused, particularly
Generals Ver and Olivas and those categorized as accessories, that there has been no evidence or witness
suppressed against them, that the erroneous conclusions of Olivas as police investigator do not make him an
accessory of the crimes he investigated and the appraisal and evaluation of the testimonies of the witnesses
presented and suppressed. There will be time and opportunity to present all these arguments and considerations at
the remand and retrial of the cases herein ordered before a neutral and impartial court.
The Supreme Court cannot permit such a sham trial and verdict and travesty of justice to stand unrectified. The
courts of the land under its aegis are courts of law and justice and equity. They would have no reason to exist if they
were allowed to be used as mere tools of injustice, deception and duplicity to subvert and suppress the truth,
instead of repositories of judicial power whose judges are sworn and committed to render impartial justice to all alike
who seek the enforcement or protection of a right or the prevention or redress of a wrong, without fear or favor and
removed from the pressures of politics and prejudice. More so, in the case at bar where the people and the world
are entitled to know the truth, and the integrity of our judicial system is at stake. In life, as an accused before the
military tribunal Ninoy had pleaded in vain that as a civilian he was entitled to due process of law and trial in the
regular civil courts before an impartial court with an unbiased prosecutor. In death, Ninoy, as the victim of the
"treacherous and vicious assassination" and the relatives and sovereign people as the aggrieved parties plead once
more for due process of law and a retrial before an impartial court with an unbiased prosecutor. The Court is
constrained to declare the sham trial a mock trial — the non-trial of the century — and that the predetermined
judgment of acquittal was unlawful and void ab initio.
1. No double jeopardy. — It is settled doctrine that double jeopardy cannot be invoked against this Court's setting
aside of the trial courts' judgment of dismissal or acquittal where the prosecution which represents the sovereign
people in criminal cases is denied due process. As the Court stressed in the 1985 case of People vs. Bocar,
Where the prosecution is deprived of a fair opportunity to prosecute and prove its case, its right to due process is
thereby violated.
The cardinal precept is that where there is a violation of basic constitutional rights, courts are ousted of their
jurisdiction. Thus, the violation of the State's right to due process raises a serious jurisdictional issue (Gumabon vs.
Director of the Bureau of Prisons, L-30026, 37 SCRA 420 [Jan. 30, 1971]) which cannot be glossed over or
disregarded at will. Where the denial of the fundamental right of due process is apparent, a decision rendered in
disregard of that right is void for lack of jurisdiction (Aducayen vs. Flores, L-30370 [May 25, 19731, 51 SCRA 78;
Shell Co. vs. Enage, L-30111-12, 49 SCRA 416 Feb. 27, 1973]). Any judgment or decision rendered notwithstanding
such violation may be regarded as a "lawless thing, which can be treated as an outlaw and slain at sight, or ignored
wherever it exhibits its head" (Aducayen vs. Flores, supra).
Respondent Judge's dismissal order dated July 7, 1967 being null and void for lack of jurisdiction, the same does
not constitute a proper basis for a claim of double jeopardy (Serino vs. Zosa, supra).
Legal jeopardy attaches only (a) upon a valid indictment, (b) before a competent court, (c) after arraignment, (d) a
valid plea having been entered; and (e) the case was dismissed or otherwise terminated without the express
consent of the accused (People vs. Ylagan, 58 Phil. 851). The lower court was not competent as it was ousted of its
jurisdiction when it violated the right of the prosecution to due process.
In effect, the first jeopardy was never terminated, and the remand of the criminal case for further hearing and/or trial
before the lower courts amounts merely to a continuation of the first jeopardy, and does not expose the accused to a
second jeopardy.
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Another exception is when the trial court commits grave abuse of discretion in dismissing a criminal case by granting
the accused’s demurrer to evidence. In point is the fairly recent case of People v. Uy,23 which involved the trial
court’s decision which granted the two separate demurrers to evidence filed by the two accused therein, both with
leave of court, resulting in their acquittal of their respective charges of murder due to insufficiency of evidence. In
resolving the petition for certiorari filed directly with this Court, we had the occasion to explain:
The general rule in this jurisdiction is that a judgment of acquittal is final and unappealable. People v. Court of
Appeals explains the rationale of this rule:
In our jurisdiction, the finality-of-acquittal doctrine as a safeguard against double jeopardy faithfully adheres to the
principle first enunciated in Kepner v. United States. In this case, verdicts of acquittal are to be regarded as
absolutely final and irreviewable. The cases of United States v. Yam Tung Way, People v. Bringas, Gandicela v.
Lutero, People v. Cabarles, People v. Bao, to name a few, are illustrative cases. The fundamental philosophy behind
the constitutional proscription against double jeopardy is to afford the defendant, who has been acquitted, final
repose and safeguard him from government oppression through the abuse of criminal processes. As succinctly
observed in Green v. United States "(t)he underlying idea, one that is deeply ingrained in at least the Anglo-
American system of jurisprudence, is that the State with all its resources and power should not be allowed to make
repeated attempts to convict an individual for an alleged offense, thereby subjecting him to embarrassment,
expense and ordeal and compelling him to live in a continuing state of anxiety and insecurity, as well as enhancing
the possibility that even though innocent, he may be found guilty." (Underscoring supplied)
The same rule applies in criminal cases where a demurrer to evidence is granted. As held in the case of People v.
Sandiganbayan:
The demurrer to evidence in criminal cases, such as the one at bar, is "filed after the prosecution had rested its
case," and when the same is granted, it calls "for an appreciation of the evidence adduced by the prosecution and
its sufficiency to warrant conviction beyond reasonable doubt, resulting in a dismissal of the case on the merits,
tantamount to an acquittal of the accused." Such dismissal of a criminal case by the grant of demurrer to evidence
may not be appealed, for to do so would be to place the accused in double-jeopardy. The verdict being one of
acquittal, the case ends there. (Italics in the original)
Like any other rule, however, the above-said rule is not absolute. By way of exception, a judgment of acquittal in a
criminal case may be assailed in a petition for certiorari under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court upon a clear showing by
the petitioner that the lower court, in acquitting the accused, committed not merely reversible errors of judgment but
also grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction or a denial of due process, thus rendering
the assailed judgment void. (Emphasis supplied.)
In Sanvicente v. People,24 the Court allowed the review of a decision of the Court of Appeals (CA) which reversed
the accused’s acquittal upon demurrer to evidence filed by the accused with leave of court, the CA ruling that the
trial court committed grave abuse of discretion in preventing the prosecution from establishing the due execution
and authenticity of certain letter marked therein as Exhibit "LL," which supposedly "positively identified therein
petitioner as the perpetrator of the crime charged." The Court, in a petition for certiorari, sustained the CA’s power to
review the order granting the demurrer to evidence, explaining thus:
Under Rule 119, Section 23 of the Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure, as amended, the trial court may dismiss
the action on the ground of insufficiency of evidence upon a demurrer to evidence filed by the accused with or
without leave of court. In resolving accused’s demurrer to evidence, the court is merely required to ascertain
whether there is competent or sufficient evidence to sustain the indictment or support a verdict of guilt.
The grant or denial of a demurrer to evidence is left to the sound discretion of the trial court and its ruling on the
matter shall not be disturbed in the absence of a grave abuse of discretion. Significantly, once the court grants the
demurrer, such order amounts to an acquittal and any further prosecution of the accused would violate the
constitutional proscription on double jeopardy. This constitutes an exception to the rule that the dismissal of a
criminal case made with the express consent of the accused or upon his own motion bars a plea of double jeopardy.
The finality-of-acquittal rule was stressed thus in People v. Velasco:
The fundamental philosophy highlighting the finality of an acquittal by the trial court cuts deep into the "humanity of
the laws and in jealous watchfulness over the rights of the citizens, when brought in unequal contest with the State
xxx. Thus Green expressed the concern that "(t)he underlying idea, one that is deeply ingrained in at least the
Anglo-American system of jurisprudence, is that the State with all its resources and power should not be allowed to
make repeated attempts to convict an individual for an alleged offense thereby subjecting him to embarrassment,
expense and ordeal and compelling him to live in a continuing state of anxiety and insecurity, as well as enhancing
the possibility that even though innocent, he may be found guilty."
It is axiomatic that on the basis of humanity, fairness and justice, an acquitted defendant is entitled to the right of
repose as a direct consequence of the finality of his acquittal. The philosophy underlying this rule establishing the
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absolute nature of acquittals is "part of the paramount importance criminal justice system attaches to the protection
of the innocent against wrongful conviction." The interest in the finality-of-acquittal rule, confined exclusively to
verdicts of not guilty, is easy to understand: it is a need for "repose", a desire to know the exact extent of one’s
liability. With this right of repose, the criminal justice system has built in a protection to insure that the innocent, even
those whose innocence rests upon a jury’s leniency, will not be found guilty in a subsequent proceeding.
Given the far-reaching scope of an accused’s right against double jeopardy, even an appeal based on an alleged
misappreciation of evidence will not lie. The only instance when double jeopardy will not attach is when the trial
court acted with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction, such as where the prosecution
was denied the opportunity to present its case or where the trial was a sham. However, while certiorari may be
availed of to correct an erroneous acquittal, the petitioner in such an extraordinary proceeding must clearly
demonstrate that the trial court blatantly abused its authority to a point so grave as to deprive it of its very power to
dispense justice. (Emphasis supplied.)
By this time, it is settled that the appellate court may review dismissal orders of trial courts granting an accused’s
demurrer to evidence. This may be done via the special civil action of certiorari under Rule 65 based on the ground
of grave abuse of discretion, amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction. Such dismissal order, being considered void
judgment, does not result in jeopardy. Thus, when the order of dismissal is annulled or set aside by an appellate
court in an original special civil action via certiorari, the right of the accused against double jeopardy is not violated.
Unfortunately, what petitioner People of the Philippines, through then Secretary of Justice Teofisto T. Guingona, Jr.
and then Solicitor General Silvestre H. Bello, III, filed with the Court in the present case is an appeal by way of a
petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 raising a pure question of law, which is different from a petition for
certiorari under Rule 65.
In Madrigal Transport Inc. v. Lapanday Holdings Corporation,25 we have enumerated the distinction between the
two remedies/actions, to wit:
Between an appeal and a petition for certiorari, there are substantial distinctions which shall be explained below.
As to the Purpose. Certiorari is a remedy designed for the correction of errors of jurisdiction, not errors of judgment.
In Pure Foods Corporation v. NLRC, we explained the simple reason for the rule in this light:
"When a court exercises its jurisdiction, an error committed while so engaged does not deprive it of the jurisdiction
being exercised when the error is committed. If it did, every error committed by a court would deprive it of its
jurisdiction and every erroneous judgment would be a void judgment. This cannot be allowed. The administration of
justice would not survive such a rule. Consequently, an error of judgment that the court may commit in the exercise
of its jurisdiction is not correct[a]ble through the original civil action of certiorari."
The supervisory jurisdiction of a court over the issuance of a writ of certiorari cannot be exercised for the purpose of
reviewing the intrinsic correctness of a judgment of the lower court -- on the basis either of the law or the facts of the
case, or of the wisdom or legal soundness of the decision. Even if the findings of the court are incorrect, as long as it
has jurisdiction over the case, such correction is normally beyond the province of certiorari. Where the error is not
one of jurisdiction, but of an error of law or fact -- a mistake of judgment -- appeal is the remedy.
As to the Manner of Filing. Over an appeal, the CA exercises its appellate jurisdiction and power of review. Over a
certiorari, the higher court uses its original jurisdiction in accordance with its power of control and supervision over
the proceedings of lower courts. An appeal is thus a continuation of the original suit, while a petition for certiorari is
an original and independent action that was not part of the trial that had resulted in the rendition of the judgment or
order complained of. The parties to an appeal are the original parties to the action. In contrast, the parties to a
petition for certiorari are the aggrieved party (who thereby becomes the petitioner) against the lower court or quasi-
judicial agency, and the prevailing parties (the public and the private respondents, respectively).
As to the Subject Matter. Only judgments or final orders and those that the Rules of Court so declared are
appealable. Since the issue is jurisdiction, an original action for certiorari may be directed against an interlocutory
order of the lower court prior to an appeal from the judgment; or where there is no appeal or any plain, speedy or
adequate remedy.
As to the Period of Filing. Ordinary appeals should be filed within fifteen days from the notice of judgment or final
order appealed from. Where a record on appeal is required, the appellant must file a notice of appeal and a record
on appeal within thirty days from the said notice of judgment or final order. A petition for review should be filed and
served within fifteen days from the notice of denial of the decision, or of the petitioner’s timely filed motion for new
trial or motion for reconsideration. In an appeal by certiorari, the petition should be filed also within fifteen days from
the notice of judgment or final order, or of the denial of the petitioner’s motion for new trial or motion for
reconsideration.
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On the other hand, a petition for certiorari should be filed not later than sixty days from the notice of judgment, order,
or resolution. If a motion for new trial or motion for reconsideration was timely filed, the period shall be counted from
the denial of the motion.
As to the Need for a Motion for Reconsideration. A motion for reconsideration is generally required prior to the filing
of a petition for certiorari, in order to afford the tribunal an opportunity to correct the alleged errors. Note also that
this motion is a plain and adequate remedy expressly available under the law. Such motion is not required before
appealing a judgment or final order.
Also in Madrigal, we stressed that the special civil action of certiorari and appeal are two different remedies mutually
exclusive; they are neither alternative nor successive. Where appeal is available, certiorari will not prosper. In the
dismissal of a criminal case upon demurrer to evidence, appeal is not available as such an appeal will put the
accused in double jeopardy. Certiorari, however, is allowed.
For being the wrong remedy taken by petitioner People of the Philippines in this case, this petition is outrightly
dismissible. The Court cannot reverse the assailed dismissal order of the trial court by appeal without violating
private respondent’s right against double jeopardy.
Even assuming that the Court may treat an "appeal" as a special civil action of certiorari, which definitely this Court
has the power to do, when there is a clear showing of grave abuse of discretion committed by the lower court, the
instant petition will nevertheless fail on the merits as the succeeding discussion will show.
There are actually two (2) acts involved in this case, namely, the warrantless arrest and the warrantless search.
There is no question that warrantless search may be conducted as an incident to a valid warrantless arrest. The law
requires that there be first a lawful arrest before a search can be made; the process cannot be reversed.26 However,
if there are valid reasons to conduct lawful search and seizure which thereafter shows that the accused is currently
committing a crime, the accused may be lawfully arrested in flagrante delicto27 without need for a warrant of arrest.
Finding that the warrantless arrest preceded the warrantless search in the case at bar, the trial court granted private
respondent's demurrer to evidence and acquitted him of all the three charges for lack of evidence, because the
unlawful arrest resulted in the inadmissibility of the evidence gathered from an invalid warrantless search. The trial
court’s ratiocination is quoted as follows:
The threshold issue raised by the accused in his Demurrer to Evidence is whether his warrantless arrest and search
were lawful as argued by the prosecution, or unlawful as asserted by the defense.
Under Section 5, Rule 113 of the New Rules of Court, a peace officer may arrest a person without a warrant: (a)
when in his presence, the person to be arrested has committed, is actually committing, or is attempting to commit an
offense; (b) when an offense has in fact just been committed, and he has personal knowledge of facts indicating that
the person to be arrested has committed it, and (c) when the person to be arrested is a prisoner who has escaped
from a penal establishment or place where he is serving final judgment or temporarily confined while being
transferred from one confinement to another. None of these circumstances were present when the accused was
arrested. The accused was merely walking from the Maria Orosa Apartment and was about to enter the parked
BMW car when the police officers arrested and frisked him and searched his car. The accused was not committing
any visible offense at the time of his arrest. Neither was there an indication that he was about to commit a crime or
that he had just committed an offense. The unlicensed AMT Cal.380 9mm Automatic Back-up Pistol that the
accused had in his possession was concealed inside the right front pocket of his pants. And the handgun was
bantam and slim in size that it would not give an outward indication of a concealed gun if placed inside the pant's
side pocket as was done by the accused. The arresting officers had no information and knowledge that the accused
was carrying an unlicensed handgun, nor did they see him in possession thereof immediately prior to his arrest.
Ditto on the 32 bags of shabu and the other unlicensed Daewoo Cal. 9mm Pistol with magazine that were found and
seized from the car. The contraband items in the car were not in plain view. The 32 bags of shabu were in the trunk
compartment, and the Daewoo handgun was underneath the driver’s seat of the car. The police officers had no
information, or knowledge that the banned articles were inside the car, or that the accused had placed them there.
The police officers searched the car on mere suspicion that there was shabu therein.
On this matter, pertinent portions of the testimonies of Police Inspector Cielito Coronel and SP03 Reynaldo are
hereunder quoted:
A. The apprehension was made in front of an apartment along Maria Orosa Street, Ermita, Manila.
Q. What was the reason why you together with other policemen effected the arrest of the accused?
A. We arrested him because of the information relayed to us by one of those whom we have previously
apprehended in connection with the delivery of shabu somewhere also in Ermita, Manila.
Q. When you established that he was somewhere at Maria Orosa, what did you do?
Q. You yourself, Mr. Witness, where did you position yourself during that time?
Q. What happened when you and your companions were positioned in that place?
A. We introduced ourselves as police officers and we frisked him and we asked him to open the back compartment
of his car.
Q. You said you frisked him, what was the result of that?
A. He was found in possession of one back-up pistol with one loaded magazine and likewise when the compartment
was opened several plastic bags containing white crystalline substance suspected to be shabu (were found).
A. When the car was further search we later found another firearm, a Daewoo Pistol at the place under the seat of
the driver.
Q. What about the suspected shabu that you recovered, what did you do with that?
A. The suspected shabu that we recovered were forwarded to the NBI for laboratory examination.
A. It was found positive for methamphetamine hydrochloride. (TSN, pp. 3-8, November 15, 1996).
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Q. You arrested Joseph Junio and Redentor Teck for alleged transporting of shabu on May 16, 1996, at 11:00 p.m.,
is it not?
A. Yes, Sir.
A. Yes, Sir.
Q. Redentor Teck told you that he is a talent manager at the Glenmore Modeling Agency, is it not?
A. Yes, Sir.
A. I supposed, Sir.
Q. And that is why immediately after Redentor Teck told you that he is an employee of the Glenmore Modeling
Agency owned by Lawrence Wang, naturally, you and your companions look for Lawrence Wang to shed light on the
transporting of shabu by Redentor Teck and Joseph Junio, is it not?
A. Yes, Sir.
Q. Thereafter, you spotted a person previously described by Redentor Teck as Lawrence Wang, is it not?
A. Yes, Sir.
Q. While you were arresting Lawrence Wang, your companions at the same time searched the BMW car described
in your affidavit of arrest, is it not?
A. Yes, Sir.
Q. Lawrence Wang was not inside the BMW car while the same was searched, is it not?
Q. The driver of the car was inside the car when the arrest and search were made, is it not?
A. Yes, Sir.
Q. When you effected the arrest, there was no warrant of arrest, is it not?
A. Yes, Sir.
Q. When the search was made on the BMW car, there was no search warrant, is it not?
Q. What kind of specific offense did the accused allegedly do so that you arrested him, Mr. Witness?
A. He was arrested on the basis of the recovered drugs in his possession placed inside his car.
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xxx xxx xxx
Q. Mr. witness, you said that you recovered drug from the car of the accused, please tell us the antecedent
circumstances which led you to recover or confiscate these items?
A. Earlier in the evening about 11:00 p.m. of May 16, we arrested one Redentor Teck and Joseph Junio.
A. May 16, about 11:00 p.m. They were arrested and when they were investigated, Teck mentioned the name of
Lawrence Wang as his employer.
A. They were arrested while in the act of transporting shabu or handling shabu to another previously arrested
person. It was a series of arrest.
A. Yes, Your Honor. About 11:00 p.m. of May 16, we arrested three (3) persons, SPO2 Vergel de Dios, a certain
Arellano and a certain Rogelio Noble. When they were arrested they divulged the name of the source.
A. Yes, Your Honor. For unlawful possession of shabu . Then they divulged to us the name of the person from whom
they get shabu.
A. One Alias Frank, who turned out to be Redentor Teck and Joseph Junio. We let them call Redentor Teck and
Joseph Junio thru the cellphone and pretend and to order another supply of shabu.
A. While they were about to hand over another bag of shabu to Noble and company.
COURT: And these two reveals (revealed) some information to you as to the source of the shabu?
COURT: What did you do when you were told about that?
A. They also told us that there was an ongoing delivery of shabu on that morning.
COURT: When?
A. We asked them where we could find Lawrence Wang and Teck lead us to Maria Orosa Apartment where we
conducted a stake out which lasted up to 2:00 a.m.
A. When the person of the accused was identified to us, we saw him opening his car together with his driver.
A. Probably, Sir.
A. We saw him opened his car and we have a suspicion that there was a shabu inside the compartment of the car.
COURT: All right, when you saw the accused opened his car, what did you do?
A. We approached him.
COURT: And this shabu that you saw inside the compartment of the car, what did you do with that?
A. Well, he was first arrested by Captain Margallo and Lt. Coronel while I was the one who inspected and opened
the compartment of the car and saw the shabu. (TSN, pp. 15-24, December 16, 1996).
COURT: From your testimony and that of Police Inspector Cielito Coronel, this Court has gathered that prior to the
arrest of the accused there were three (3) men that your team arrested. One of whom is a police officer.
A: Yes, Sir.
COURT: And on the occasion of the arrest of these three men shabu were confiscated from them?
A: Yes, Sir.
Q: And in the course of the investigation of these three men, you were able to discover that Redentor Teck and
Joseph Junio were the source of the regulated drug that were confiscated from the three men that you have
arrested?
A: Yes, Sir.
Q: Now, thru entrapment base[d] on your testimony you were able to apprehend also these two men, Redentor Teck
and Joseph Junio?
A: Yes, Sir.
Q: These two men, Redentor Teck and Joseph Junio they were also investigated by your team?
A: Yes, Sir.
Q: Did you ask Redentor and Joseph the source of shabu that you confiscated from them at the time of the (their)
arrest?
A: Yes, Sir. They refuse to say the source, however, they told me that they were working for the accused.
Q: You also testified that Redentor informed you that there was another delivery of shabu scheduled that morning of
(stop) was it May 16 or 17? The other delivery that is scheduled on?
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A: On the 17th.
A: No, Sir.
Q: At that time when you decided to look for the accused to ask him to shed light on the matter concerning the arrest
of these two employees in possession of shabu. Did you and did your team suspect the accused as being involved
in the transaction that lead (led) to the arrest of Redentor and Joseph?
Q: When you saw the accused walking towards his car, did you know whether he was carrying a gun?
Q: It was concealed?
A: Yes, Sir.
Q: So, the only time that you and your team learned that he was in possession of the gun is when he was bodily
search?
A: Yes, Sir. That is the only time that I came to know about when Capt. Margallo handed to me the gun.
Q: Other than walking towards his car, the accused was not doing anything else?
A: None, Sir.
Q: That would invite your suspicion or give indication that he was intending to do something unlawful or illegal?
A: No, Sir.
Q: When you searched the car, did the accused protest or try to prevent your team from searching his car?
Clearly therefore, the warrantless arrest of the accused and the search of his person and the car were without
probable cause and could not be licit. The arrest of the accused did not fall under any of the exception to the
requirements of warrantless arrests, (Sec. 5, Rule 113, Rules of Court) and is therefore, unlawful and derogatory of
his constitutional right of liberty. x x x
The trial court resolved the case on the basis of its findings that the arrest preceded the search, and finding no basis
to rule in favor of a lawful arrest, it ruled that the incidental search is likewise unlawful. Any and all pieces of
evidence acquired as a consequence thereof are inadmissible in evidence. Thus, the trial court dismissed the case
for lack of evidence.
Contrary to its position at the trial court, the People, however, now posits that "inasmuch as it has been shown in the
present case that the seizure without warrant of the regulated drugs and unlicensed firearms in the accused’s
possession had been validly made upon probable cause and under exigent circumstances, then the warrantless
arrest of the accused must necessarily have to be regarded as having been made on the occasion of the
commission of the crime in flagrante delicto, and therefore constitutionally and statutorily permissible and lawful."28
In effect, the People now contends that the warrantless search preceded the warrantless arrest. Since the case falls
under an exception to the general rule requiring search warrant prior to a valid search and seizure, the police
officers were justified in requiring the private respondent to open his BMW car’s trunk to see if he was carrying
illegal drugs.
The conflicting versions as to whether the arrest preceded the search or vice versa, is a matter of credibility of
evidence. It entails appreciation of evidence, which may be done in an appeal of a criminal case because the entire
case is thrown open for review, but not in the case of a petition for certiorari where the factual findings of the trial
court are binding upon the Court. Since a dismissal order consequent to a demurrer to evidence is not subject to
appeal and reviewable only by certiorari, the factual finding that the arrest preceded the search is conclusive upon
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this Court. The only legal basis for this Court to possibly reverse and set aside the dismissal order of the trial court
upon demurrer to evidence would be if the trial court committed grave abuse of discretion in excess of jurisdiction
when it ruled that there was no legal basis to lawfully effect a warrantless arrest.
The pertinent provisions of Rule 113 of the Rules on Criminal Procedure on warrantless arrest provide:
Sec. 5. Arrest without warrant; when lawful. - A peace officer or a private person may, without a warrant, arrest a
person:
a) When, in his presence, the person to be arrested has committed, is actually committing, or is attempting to
commit an offense;
b) When an offense has just been committed, and he has probable cause to believe based on personal
knowledge of facts or circumstances that the person to be arrested has committed it; and
c) When the person to be arrested is a prisoner who has escaped from a penal establishment or place where
he is serving final judgment or is temporarily confined while his case is pending, or has escaped while being
transferred from one confinement to another.
Section 5, above, provides three (3) instances when warrantless arrest may be lawfully effected: (a) arrest of a
suspect in flagrante delicto; (b) arrest of a suspect where, based on personal knowledge of the arresting officer,
there is probable cause that said suspect was the author of a crime which had just been committed; (c) arrest of a
prisoner who has escaped from custody serving final judgment or temporarily confined while his case is pending.
For a warrantless arrest of an accused caught in flagrante delicto under paragraph (a) of Section 5 to be valid, two
requisites must concur: (1) the person to be arrested must execute an overt act indicating that he has just
committed, is actually committing, or is attempting to commit a crime; and (2) such overt act is done in the presence
or within the view of the arresting officer.29 1awphi1.nét
The facts and circumstances surrounding the present case did not manifest any suspicious behavior on the part of
private respondent Lawrence Wang that would reasonably invite the attention of the police. He was merely walking
from the Maria Orosa Apartment and was about to enter the parked BMW car when the police operatives arrested
him, frisked and searched his person and commanded him to open the compartment of the car, which was later on
found to be owned by his friend, David Lee. He was not committing any visible offense then. Therefore, there can be
no valid warrantless arrest in flagrante delicto under paragraph (a) of Section 5. It is settled that "reliable
information" alone, absent any overt act indicative of a felonious enterprise in the presence and within the view of
the arresting officers, is not sufficient to constitute probable cause that would justify an in flagrante delicto arrest.30
Neither may the warrantless arrest be justified under paragraph (b) of Section 5. What is clearly established from the
testimonies of the arresting officers is that Wang was arrested mainly on the information that he was the employer of
Redentor Teck and Joseph Junio who were previously arrested and charged for illegal transport of shabu. Teck and
Junio did not even categorically identify Wang to be their source of the shabu they were caught with in flagrante
delicto. Upon the duo’s declaration that there will be a delivery of shabu on the early morning of the following day,
May 17, which is only a few hours thereafter, and that Wang may be found in Maria Orosa Apartment along Maria
Orosa Street, the arresting officers conducted "surveillance" operation in front of said apartment, hoping to find a
person which will match the description of one Lawrence Wang, the employer of Teck and Junio. These
circumstances do not sufficiently establish the existence of probable cause based on personal knowledge as
required in paragraph (b) of Section 5.
And doubtless, the warrantless arrest does not fall under paragraph (c) of Section 5.
The inevitable conclusion, as correctly made by the trial court, is that the warrantless arrest was illegal. Ipso jure, the
warrantless search incidental to the illegal arrest is likewise unlawful.
In People v. Aminnudin,31 the Court declared as inadmissible in evidence the marijuana found in appellant’s
possession during a search without a warrant, because it had been illegally seized, in disregard of the Bill of Rights:
In the case at bar, the accused-appellant was not, at the moment of his arrest, committing a crime nor was it shown
that he was about to do so or that he had just done so. What he was doing was descending the gangplank of the
M/V Wilcon 9 and there was no outward indication that called for his arrest. To all appearances, he was like any of
the other passengers innocently disembarking from the vessel. It was only when the informer pointed to him as the
carrier of the marijuana that he suddenly became a suspect and so subject to apprehension. It was the fugitive
finger that triggered his arrest. The identification of the informer was the probable cause as determined by the officer
(and not a judge) that authorized them to pounce upon Aminnudin and immediately arrest him.
The People’s contention that Wang waived his right against unreasonable search and seizure has no factual basis.
While we agree in principle that consent will validate an otherwise illegal search, however, based on the evidence on
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record, Wang resisted his arrest and the search on his person and belongings.32 The implied acquiescence to the
search, if there was any, could not have been more than mere passive conformity given under intimidating or
coercive circumstances and is thus considered no consent at all within the purview of the constitutional guarantee.33
Moreover, the continuing objection to the validity of the warrantless arrest made of record during the arraignment
bolsters Wang’s claim that he resisted the warrantless arrest and search.
We cannot close this ponencia without a word of caution: those who are supposed to enforce the law are not
justified in disregarding the rights of the individual in the name of order. Order is too high a price for the loss of
liberty. As Justice Holmes once said, "I think it is less evil that some criminals should escape than that the
government should play an ignoble part." It is simply not allowed in free society to violate a law to enforce another,
especially if the law violated is the Constitution itself.34
SO ORDERED.
CANCIO C. GARCIA
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
REYNATO S. PUNO
Chief Justice
Chairperson
ADOLFO S. AZCUNA
Associate Justice
C E RTI F I CATI O N
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution, I certify that the conclusions in the above decision had been
reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court’s Division.
REYNATO S. PUNO
Chief Justice
Foonotes
1 Penned by Judge Perfecto A.S. Laguio, Jr.; Annex "A" of the petition, Rollo, pp. 41-55.
2
RTC records, p. 2.
3 Id. at 3.
4 Id. at 4.
5
Id. at 36.
6 TSN, February 26, 1997, p. 6.
8
Id. at 11.
9 RTC records, p. 45.
10 Id. at 47-49.
11
Id. at 51-76.
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12 Id. at 78-85.
13
Id. at 109-115.
14 Original Record, pp. 135-149.
16
Id. at 57.
17 Id. at 58-60.
18 Id. at 181.
19
Id. at 316-337.
20 Id. at 353.
22
G.R. No. L-72670, September 12, 1986, 144 SCRA 43.
23 G.R. No. 158157, September 30, 2005, 471 SCRA 668.
25
G.R. No. 156067, August 11, 2004, 436 SCRA 123.
26 Malacat v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 123595, December 12, 1997, 283 SCRA 159.
27 People v. Claudio, G.R. No. L-72564, April 15, 1988, 160 SCRA 646.
28
Petition, p. 21; Rollo, p. 23.
29 Supra, citing the Concurring Opinion of then Justice, later Chief Justice Artemio V. Panganiban in People v.
Doria, supra.
30
People v. Binad Sy Chua, 444 Phil. 757 (2003), citing People v. Molina, G.R. No. 133917, February 19,
2001, 352 SCRA 174.
33
People v. Compacion, 414 Phil. 68 (2001).
34 Supra note 32, at 411.
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