People vs. Enriquez, JR., GR No. 90738 (Case) PDF
People vs. Enriquez, JR., GR No. 90738 (Case) PDF
People vs. Enriquez, JR., GR No. 90738 (Case) PDF
SUPREME COURT
Manila
FIRST DIVISION
G.R. No. 90738 December 9, 1991
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee
vs.
ANTONIO ENRIQUE, JR., accused-appellant.
The Solicitor General for plaintiff-appellee.
Bonifacio P. Macadaeg for accused-appellant.
MEDIALDEA, J.:p
The accused-appellant, Antonio Enrique, Jr. was charged before the Regional Trial Court of
Aparri, Cagayan, Branch VII with violation of Section 4, Art. II in relation to Section 2, par
(e), No. 1 and par. (1), Article I of RA No. 6425, as amended otherwise known as the
Dangerous Drugs Act of 1972. The information filed against him reads:
That on or about May 9, 1988, in the municipality of Aparri province of
Cagayan, and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the said accused,
Antonio Enrique, Jr., y Gumtang, not being authorized by law to sell, deliver,
give away to another or distribute any prohibited drug, did then and there
wilfully, unlawfully an feloniously sell and deliver five (5) sticks of marijuana
cigarettes, prohibited drug, to one Patrolman Danilo Natividad, a member of
the Integrated National Police (INP) and assigned with the 2nd Narcotic
Regional Unit, Narcotics Command, who was then posing as a buyer of the
said prohibited drug for the consideration of TEN (P10.00) PESOS.
Contrary to law. (Rollo, p. 11)
Upon arraignment, the accused entered a plea of not guilty to the crime charged (Records, p.
67). After trial on the merits, the court rendered its decision on September 14, 1989, the
dispositive portion of which reads:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the Court finds the accused Antonio
Enrique, Jr. GUILTY beyond reasonable doubt of the crime charged.
Accordingly, the accused Antonio Enrique, Jr. is hereby sentenced to suffer
the penalty of RECLUSION PERPETUA and to pay a fine of P20,000.00. The
marijuana cigarettes subject of this case is (sic) hereby forfeited in favor of the
government.
SO ORDERED. (Rollo, p. 17)
above the serial number); "B" ( first pack which is fully opened); "B-1" to "B-5" (another
pack confiscated from the suspect); "D" (certificate of Field Testing) "D-1" (signature of Maj.
Geary Barias; "E" (laboratory result) "E-1" (qualitative result of the laboratory test); and "E2" (signature of Capt. Rubio) should have not been admitted by trial court since there was no
confiscation receipt shown; that the admission of exhibits "A," "A-2," "B" to -B-5" and "C,"
was erroneous because the same were taken during custodial investigation and therefore,
violative of the constitution; and that exhibit "A" should have been rejected because its serial
number was neither alleged nor mentioned in the information. (Rollo pp, 26-29)
We affirm.
Appellant completely misses the whole point of his prosecution and ultimate conviction
under RA 6425. He was caught in flagrante delicto selling marijuana cigarettes to a poseurbuyer in exchange for money. The commission of the offense of illegal sale of marijuana
requires merely the consummation of the selling transaction (People v. Macuto, G.R. No.
80112, August 25, 1989, 176 SCRA 762). The serial number of the marked money need not
even be stated in the information. In one case, We held that the non-presentation of the
marked money at the trial is not indispensable to the conviction of the accused-appellant (see
People v. Recedes, G.R. No. 83372, February 27, 1991). What is important is the fact that the
poseur-buyer received the marijuana from the appellant and that the said cigarettes were
presented in court as evidence (see Macuto case, Ibid). Having been caught in the act of
selling a prohibited drug, appellant's arrest was lawful under Rule 113 of the Rules of Court,
Section 5(a), thereof The marked money and the marijuana cigarettes were immediately by
the officers contrary to appellant's allegation that the same were taken during the custodial
investigation. In fact, there was a receipt of the property seized items, from the accusedappellant by the officers and a copy thereof was him. The warrantless being an incident to a
lawful arrest is itself lawful (People v. Claudio, G.R. No. 72564, April 15, 1988, 160 SCRA
646). Hence, whatever is found in the appellant's possession or in his control may be seized
and used in evidence against him (see Alvero v. Dizon, 76 Phil. 637). Apart from the items,
the NARCOM officer, in a clear and categorical manner, testified to the circumstance of the
appellant's entrapment and arrest which was corroborated by the testimony of his companion
officer, to wit.
PROSECUTOR UNCIANO
As of May 9, 1988, what position of responsibility were you holding in the
government service if any?
PAT. DANILO P. NATIVIDAD
A I was detailed at the Narcotics Intelligence/Operative and at the same
time investigator which covers the whole Region 02, sir.
Q And on May 9, 1988, at around 2:45 in the afternoon, do you remember
where were you (sic)?
A Yes, your Honor, I was at Valdez Restaurant at Macanaya Street, Apparri,
Cagayan.
Q Were you alone then?
(The witness pointed to a portion in the P10.00 bill which was previously
marked as Exhibit "A-2")
Q And you said that you bought five marijuana sticks. If those five marijuana
cigarettes presented to you, can you still recognize the same?
A Yes, your Honor.
Q Showing to you this pack marked as Exhibit 'B' which contained Exhibit 'Bl' for the first roll, Exhibit "B-2" for the second roll, Exhibit "B-3" for the third
roll, Exhibit "B-4" for the fourth roll, Exhibit "B-5" for the fifth roll. Tell the
Honorable Court what are those?
A These are the same marijuana cigarettes which I bought from Antonio
Enrique, Jr., sir. (TSN, July 6, 1989, pp. 26-29)
xxx xxx xxx
Prosecutor Unciano
Q For what purpose were you sent here at Aparri, Cagayan?
Patrolman Alejandro Quebalayan
A We were sent here purposely to effect and (sic) arrest the activities of a
certain alias Bong which is engaged in selling marijuana cigarettes, sir, in
Aparri, Cagayan.
Q On that date, May 9, 1988, at around 2:45 in the afternoon, where were you
particularly?
A We were particularly at Macanaya Street, infront of Valdez Restaurant,
Aparri, Cagayan, sir.
Q You said we, who were your companions, if any?
A My companions was Pat. Danilo Natividad, Pat. Profirio Divina and Pat.
Ellie Dabbay, sir.
Q And when at the Valdez Restaurant at that time 2:45 in the afternoon, what
if anything happened?
A At Valdez Restaurant, we saw the approaching Pat. Danilo Natividad then
(sic) they had a conversation with each other. After a few minutes, we saw the
suspect handling something to Pat. Natividad and upon return, Pat. Danilo
Natividad gave a P10.00 bill previously marked money to the suspect as
payment then Pat. Danilo Natividad inspected the contents which suspect
Bong gave to him and indeed it was marijuana cigarette. Pat. Natividad gave
us the pre-arranged signal to the members of the raiding team to close-in, air.
A Yes, sir.
Q And what did you do with those specimen?
A These specimen which consist of dried marijuana leaves and (sic) I conduct
(sic) a field testing in my office to make sure that this evidence was indeed a
marijuana and the result of the field testing wherein I used NARCOTEST
DISPOSAKIT 9 and it indicated that the liquid inside turned red which is an
indication that the specimen is indeed a marijuana, sir.
Q By the way, you said marijuana did you have to go (sic) under gone any
training?
A Yes, sir I underwent training and this was one of the subject that we had
during the said
Q And in the specimen that you said you tested, please describe to this
Honorable Court?
A Yes, sir from a marijuana sticks that was (sic) presented to me. These dried
leaves that I did only and I placed inside the disposakit and which we acted
(sic) inside and it proved that these specimen is indeed a marijuana, sir. (TSN,
July, 19, 1989, pp. 44-46)
This kind of test is judicially admissible. We have held that a chemical analysis is not an
indispensable prerequirement to establish whether a certain offered in evidence is a
prohibited drug or not and that the ability to these drugs can be acquired without a knowledge
of the chemistry to such an extent that the testimony of a witness on the point may be entitled
to great weight (United States v. Sy Liongco, 33 Phil. 54). On the basis of the positive result
of the test and the marked money, the arresting officers filed a summary of the information at
the Municipal Trial Court of Aparri, Cagayan, on May 19, 1988. Thereafter, the Biochemist
of the PC Crime Laboratory, Regional Unit 2 (Exh. E, p. 82) confirmed the presence of
marijuana in the confiscated cigarettes. Thus, appellant's other fear that the cigarettes taken
from him may have been changed just because these cigarettes were belatedly brought to the
chemist in a brown mailing envelope duly stapled cannot be entertained. This envelope was
not carelessly entrusted to anyone but a courier from the Narcotics Command headed by
Major Barias. Besides, appellant's apprehension was not accompanied by any substantial and
strong evidence to convince us of the possibility of foul play in transporting the package to
the P.C. Crime Laboratory.
Lastly, appellant impugns the non-presentation of the NARCOM informer at the trial. He
claims that he was denied the opportunity to cross examine the alleged informer and that he
concludes that such failure to present the informer as a witness is proof of the prosecution's
weak evidence (Rollo, p. 35).
Appellant's contention is unmeritorious. There was no need to present the testimony of the
NARCOM informer as the same would merely be corroborative and cumulative. In People v.
Sanchez (G.R. No. 77588, May 12, 1989, 173 SCRA 305, 313), We declared that:
... Since the testimony of the police informer was similarly not essential for
conviction of the accused, his Identity may remain confidential; there are
strong practical reasons for such continued secrecy, including the continued
health and safety of the informer and the encouragement of others to report
wrong doing to the police authorities....
In the light of the foregoing, We hold that the trial court did not err in convicting the accusedappellant. The evidence on record has fully established his guilt beyond reasonable doubt.
However, the trial court imposed upon the accused-appellant the penalty of reclusion
perpetua and a fine of P20,000.00. Under Section 4 of RA 6425 as amended by PD No. 1675,
the penalty for the sale, administration, delivery, distribution and transportation of prohibited
drugs is life imprisonment to death and a fine ranging from twenty thousand to thirty
thousand pesos. Conformably with law, the penalty that should be imposed for the crime
committed by the accused-appellant should instead be life imprisonment and a fine in the
amount of P20,000.00.
ACCORDINGLY, the decision appealed from is AFFIRMED subject to the modification as
above-indicated.
SO ORDERED.
Narvasa, C.J., (Chairman), Cruz, Feliciano and Grio-Aquino, JJ., concur.